we discovered africa

Transcription

we discovered africa
Year 4
Number 10
Mar /Apr 2010
totum
TELEVISION
BOMB MARKET
Brazil no longer
just exports
Can you do (safe!)
business with
Iraq?
ACQUISITIONS
NO LONGER AFRAID
soap operas
Ibope sets
foot into the
US market
Our multinationals
are betting on the
international
market again
WE DISCOVERED AFRICA
Brazilian companies are disputing with their Chinese
rivals the last Eldorado for business opportunities in the world
With the support of Apex-Brasil, Brazil and its products are winning the world.
And when a Brazilian product or service wins markets abroad, Brazil also wins in terms
of relevance in the international arena, currency reserves and job creation in our country. This is why Apex-Brasil is so important: it makes Brazil and our products go much further.
LEARN MORE ABOUT APEX-BRASIL AT WWW.APEXBRASIL.COM.BR
70
TALENTO JÓIAS
Contents
32
ANDRÉ CONTI/HANDOUT
10
32
10
20
22
4
26
PIB
ANTENNA
After China and India, Brazil is the star
of the London Summer Festival in 2010
Andressa Rovani
48
A VIEW FROM CAPITOL HILL
Not even the visit of Hillary Clinton helped
clear the tension between Brazil and the US
Flávia Carbonari, Washington
52
BRANDS
The challenge of making the ultra-Brazilian
guaraná a globally renowned and
appreciated soft drink
Suzana Carmargo, Zurich
58
TV GLOBO / GIANNE CARVALHO
MARCELLO CASAL JR
Brazil’s growing
presence in Africa,
the last frontier of the
globalized environment
Marco Rezende
AGENCIA VALE
36 COVER
60
TELEVISION
Led by TV Globo, independent producers
are exporting audiovisual content
José Ruy Gandra
CULTURE
Brazil’s new international renown is increasing the
search for “Brazilian Portuguese” classes abroad
Flávio de Carvalho Serpa
INTERVIEW
José Sérgio Gabrielli, CEO of Petrobras,
sheds light on the company’s situation,
here and abroad, with the pre-salt
Nely Caixeta
STRATEGY
What, exactly, Brazilian multinationals are doing
to continue growing after the crisis
Cecília Pires
OPPORTUNITIES
How multinationals from emerging markets exploited
the crisis to internationalize their operations
Bruno Reis
HANDOUT/
60
66
70
76
RIO + DESIG
N
SPECIAL
Brazil’s large exporters are trying to
flee their dependency on commodities
Andréa Antonacci and W.F. Padovani
ACQUISITIONS
Why Ibope bought Zogbi International, one
of the most traditional US research institutes
Rubeny Goulart, Rio de Janeiro
EXPORTS
The latest venture by Minas Gerais to ensure its
products reach new export markets
José Maria Furtado, Belo Horizonte
HOW IT WORKS
Bureaucracy, linguistic barriers, car bombs...
The difficult task of resuming exports to Iraq
Antonio Carlos Santomauro
78
GLOBE TROTTER
EXECUTIVE TRAVEL: Qatar Airlines touches down
in Brazil and flats for business seasons in London
Marco Rezende
EXPRESS TOURISM: The past and the future
meet in present-day Shanghai.
Gustavo Rabello, Shanghai
IN TRANSIT: The joys and perils of a Brazilian
living in France.
Paulo Salvador, Paris
PIB
5
Editorial
African
Adventure
Pib’s mission is to give readers the main
information on Brazil’s growing presence in the
globalized environment and of its companies in the
international business scene. From time to time,
some vehicles dip their toes. But no national press
vehicle goes as far, or as deep, in its coverage.
Our editor Marco Rezende, a journalist who spent 19 years as
correspondent of Veja magazine in Paris and Rome, visited South
Africa, Angola and Mozambique. There, he observed in detail the
saga of Brazilian companies of all sizes who went out looking for
the opportunities offered by African markets. The result is a superb,
enthusiastic 12-page report on the growth in Brazilian business in this
part of the world in which everything, apparently, has yet to be built.
The interest aroused by Brazil abroad is also evident on other
fronts. In the production of TV content, for example. The TV Globo
telenovelas have already been sold to 146 countries. You can count
on one hand the number of global TV stations capable of doing this.
In recent years, Brazil has also seen the emergence of a wave of
independent producers – for whom exporting documentaries and
animations has also become a routine.
Another phenomenon shows how the world is enchanted with
Brazil: the search for Brazilian Portuguese classes. To cite just one
example, at Washington’s ultra-traditional Georgetown University,
the number of students enrolled in Brazilian Portuguese courses has
quadrupled in the last two years. In other words: despite the crisis and
all the attention it has attracted, the world hasn’t lost sight of Brazil.
Crisis? PIB also features a
report on what, exactly, the main
Brazilian multinationals are
doing to overcome the impact
of the crisis. Their strategies
make clear the important role
that Brazil will clearly play over
the next few decades. It is this
leading role for Brazil that PIB
covers and which, in a certain
way, it anticipates in each
PIB’s
edition. At the end of the day,
Marco Antônio
our focus is Brazil. But our
and minister
horizon is the world.
Miguel Jorge in
Johannesburg
6
PIB
Nely Caixeta
TOTUM
EXCELÊNCIA EDITORIAL
Nely Caixeta
PIB
BRAZILIAN COMPANIES
GO INTERNATIONAL
A TWO-MONTHLY MAGAZINE FOCUSING ON
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS
Publisher
Nely Caixeta • [email protected]
editors
Armando Mendes, José Ruy Gandra e Marco Rezende
Contributors to this edition
Andrea Antonacci, Andressa Rovani, Antonio Carlos
Santomauro, Cecília Pires, Flávia Carbonari,
de Washington, Flavio de Carvalho Serpa , Gustavo Rabello,
de Xangai, José Maria Furtado, de Belo Horizonte, Nara
Vidal, de Londres, Paulo Salvador, de Paris, Rubeny Goulart,
do Rio de Janeiro, Suzana Camargo, de Zurique, W.F. Padovani
Photo Editor
Max Nogueira
photographer
Gloria Flugel
designer
Renato Dantas
cover
Marcelo Calenda
Copydesk and Preparation
Mary Ferrarini
Translation
John Jardine, John Fitzpatrick e Kevin Wall
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Letters
Dear Editor,
I’ve just discovered the PIB magazine
via the English version on the Internet.
We are delighted to receive publications such as
PIB, which illustrate the good momentum of Brazil
and are even a work tool for exporters, who can
recommend the digital versions to
international contacts – which would certainly
boost the chances of closing deals.
It’s Brazil showing its face; it’s the world
learning more about Brazil’s importance.
FERNANDO AGUIAR JACINTO
LOUÇAS SANITÁRIAS HERVY
SÃO PAULO – SP
I’m a sociologist and researcher from
São Paulo University’s Innovation
and Competition Observatory.
I really enjoyed the article on Dabi Atlante,
a company I hadn’t heard about. It’s one
of the many examples of small innovative
companies operating in Brazil and which are slowly
starting to give our exports a new profile.
Selling more and more knowledge-intensive
products is the path taken by Asian countries to
achieve higher job and income levels. This is
an example to be followed by businessmen and
university students and encouraged
by the government.
terms of international trade, but this
shouldn’t be an excuse for immature
or rushed decisions. We have to walk in the
right direction. And, for this, the service
provided by you will always be essential.
RENATO TIMM
LIMEIRA – SP
I am doing my PhD in business management
at São Paulo University and my research
focus is the internationalization of Brazilian
companies. I am also giving classes on
a subject that discusses the internationalization
process of our companies.I really enjoy the
PIB articles and I use them in my classes.
FRANCIANE SILVEIRA
CURRENTLY TAKING PHD; TEACHER
SÃO PAULO – SP
Congratulations on the magazine! I have
just discovered PIB now and I would like
to know how to get my hands on previous editions
ALICE SOSNOWSKI
JOURNALIST
SÃO PAULO – SP
To acquire past editions of PIB, please send your
request via email to [email protected].
LUIZ CASEIRO.
SÃO PAULO - SP.
Technology
On everyone’s
lips
(and teeth!)
A N T O N I O C A R L O S S A N T O M A U R O,
R IBEIR ÃO PRETO
W
market. We’re
hat would be an to launch in the global
about any
innovative and obviously not just talking
but instead a
state-of-the-ar t old piece of furniture,
identifies propiece of equip- “smart” cabinet that
(tags
ment for a dental ducts using RFID technology
makes
and
radio-frequency)
via
clinic? While a number of options read
orders. The cabinet monitors
spring to mind, a cabinet is certainly online
its own product inventory levels and,
not one of them. However, this
if necessary, automatically sends
is precisely what Dabi Atlante,
Internet,
the
via
Dabi Atlante,
a dental equipment manuthe respective restocking
facturer from Ribeirão Preto
requests –thus providing
(São Paulo), is gearing up
a service to the dentist
while doing away with
the need for a seller.
The lot of the first
Dabi-Atlante exports to
200 “smart” cabinets is
countries
around
already in the production line.
The equipment will not be sold, but
The company obtains
instead provided to clients. “The
of its revenues
cabinets will be our sellers”, says
from exports...
Caetano Biagi, industrial director
of Dabi Atlante. With a degree in
of
...and invests
mechanical engineering (from São
its revenue in research and
Paulo University) and business madevelopment
nagement, Caetano (28) is heir to the
LOOKING ABROAD
::
80
::
20-25%
::
72
5%
capacity stems from the company’s
strong links with individuals capable of developing projects - at universities, companies and research
institutions in Brazil and abroad.
The company, he says, channels 5%
of its revenue to investment in R&D.
This pioneering Brazilian company is competing with traditional
countries in this sector (such as the
US and Germany) and also with the
Chinese, who offer lower prices to
gain market share. Dabi has a subsidiary in Dubai, where it uses the customs warehouse of ApexBrasil (Brazilian Pro-Exports and Investments
Agency). The group is also exporting
its D700 product line, launched four
years ago and targeted at the lower
purchasing power markets.
The two lines have the same type
of products and share the company’s
production resources, but they have
separate sale and marketing strate– D700 is now being exported
gies
process
rays, and it is already in the
and Colombia.
of registering this equipment with to Paraguay
The Latin American market is
the US government. Dabi has also
main short-term bet. Accoralready requested a global patent for Dabi’s
ding to Caetano, the
its “smart” cabinet
company plans to
was
Atlante
Dabi
open subsidiaries in
the first Brazilian
neighboring councompany to produce
tries, instead of simply
dental clinics equiexporting everything
stools,
pped with
from Brazil. “We offer
allowing dentists to
clients our philosowork sitting down.
phy and working culIt also produced the
ture developed over
first national versix decades”, he says.
sions of the so-called
18 months, we will have a
“handpieces” (the famous “little en- “Within
in Mexico”.
gines”). Caetano says this innovative subsidiary
DABI ATLANTE
An exporter for over 40 years, Dabi Atlante,
from Ribeirão Preto, has paved the way for
the Brazilian dental equipment industry
to get its teeth into the global market
ANDRÉ CARDOSO
BRASÍLIA – DF
Upon reading the magazine
on the Internet, I enjoyed
the articles, which seek to
be as informative as
possible. We are a
young country in
Caetano Biagi: betting
on exports
Biagi family, controlling stockholder
of the company and of one of Brazil’s
largest sugar and ethanol groups.
Dabi Atlante’s exports (to approximately 80 countries) currently represent 20-25% of its revenue
(which the controlling stockholders
don’t disclose). The company started exporting in the 1960s, thereby
opening a window of internationalization – subsequently exploited by
other Brazilian companies from the
sector (such as Gnatus, also based
in Ribeirão Preto). As forerunner of
this movement, Dabi had the task of
exploring the international dental
equipment market for a country better known as an exporter of iron ore,
coffee and other commodities, and
not in the least bit renowned, as far
as its potential clients were concerned, for its technological capacity.
To conquer the international
market, Dabi focused on two fronts:
(i) research and development (R&D)
of products combining quality with
competitive prices; and (ii) prospecting buyers, initially, in countries
with similar socio-economical characteristics to Brazil, especially its
Latin American neighbors. In the
1990s, it even sold dental equipment
to the US, but subsequently abandoned the business – preferring to
concentrate on developing markets.
But its absence from the US market is set to end shortly – since next
year Dabi intends to return to the
US market, offering image diagnosis equipment. In 2004, it became
the first (and remains the only)
company from the Southern Hemisphere to produce panoramic X-
The “smart”
cabinet
will control
inventories and
make online
orders
Dabi in Ribeirao Preto:
looking to innovate
XXXXXXXXXX
I had the opportunity to read
PIB recently. I thought it was
beautifully illustrated
and high quality.
Congratulations to the
magazine’s editors.
PIB
73
PIB
Please address letters and e-mail to: The Editor, PIB – Avenida Brigadeiro Faria Lima, 1903, cj 33 – São Paulo, SP, 01452-911 – Brazil; [email protected]
PIB
7
It is now Brazil’s turn.
Be one of the first to take advantage. Advertise in PIB magazine.
If you want to expand the frontiers of your business or even form partnerships and joint-ventures
with Brazilian companies, this is the right place to find information, learn about the latest globalized
developments in Brazil, discover trends and publicize your company.
PIB takes your brand and message to highly qualified readers all over the world - executives from
large corporations, business leaders, well-known academics, opinion-formers and outstanding
personalities in the financial market, politics and the economy.
The magazine appears in Portuguese and English and is distributed in embassies, universities
and the most important international trade fairs.
97-0849
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TA K E A D VA N TA G E O F T H E G O O D M O M E N T B R A Z I L I S
EXPERIENCING TO EXPAND YOUR COMPANY´S HORIZONS.
CALL NOW AND FIND OUT ABOUT THIS SPECIAL OFFER
pu
W E H AV E P R E P A R E D F O R Y O U R A N N O U N C E M E N T.
www.revistapib.com.br
Antenna
ANDRESSA RAVANI
A LITTLE PIECE of bread in the format of
one of Brazil’s most famous tourist attractions will be the Brazilian star at a design
trade fair in Milan. To achieve this prestigious honor, the brioche beat out other
creations in a bakery contest to choose the
Pão de Açúcar do Rio – or Rio de Janeiro’s
Sugarloaf. Created by the traditional Rio de
Janeiro restaurant Garcia & Rodrigues, the
brioche has a fruit jam filling and a crunchy,
sugary cashew nut crust. But it’s the format
that already makes it a national preference.
Alongside the brioche, another 149
Brazilian products should touch down
in Milan in mid-April to form part of the
Rio + Design space at the International
Furniture Show. The aim is to divulge the
design
Rio+ Design takes 150 products to
Milan’s International Furniture Show
work of Rio de Janeiro designers to the
attending industries, and the expectation
is for 20% growth in the number of deals
closed at the event.
The Rio + Design, now in its second edition,
is a partnership between the Rio de Janeiro
state government and Sebrae (Brazilian Support Service for Micro and Small
Companies) to show off to the world the
creative potential of Brazilian designers.
The 27 exhibitors that promise to attract
the attention of the Italians include
Antonio Bernardo and his jewels,
the lamps and lighting fixtures of
Celso Santos and Levi Domingos
and the furniture of Índio da Costa,
Fernando Jaeger and Bruno Novo.
HANDOUT
Our daily
Via Uno:
stores in
114 countries
Shoes for
everyone!
10
PIB
needle rack created
by Bruno Novo
DESIGN
DESIGN
T/ RIO +
T/ RIO +
Ring Puzzle,
by Antonio
Bernardo; and
Tupi chair,
by Lattoog
Design
The company’s internationalization
process has been so quick that now, of
the 300,000 pairs of shoes produced per
month, half are exported. You can find Via
Uno shoes in 25 countries, including Chile,
Mexico, Dubai, Holland, Cuba, Italy, Portugal, France and South Africa. The secret?
“We translate trends and accompany the
fashion world”, says Kieling.
HANDOU
HANDOUT
HANDOU
HANDOUT/ RIO + DESIGN
Bread made by the
Garcia & Rodrigues
restaurant
HANDOUT
HANDOUT/ RIO + DESIGN
poster of the Rio
+ Design event,
highlighting the
city’s glow
Despite belonging to the Brazilian
footwear sector, which for years
has suffered from BRL appreciation
against other global currencies, the
Rio Grande do Sul company Via Uno
can’t complain. On the contrary.
Since initiating its expansion process
via franchises in 2005, Via Uno now
has 114 international stores. According
to marketing director Paulo Kieling,
the target is 160 ex-Brazil
stores by year-end, which
would brings its total
number of stores to 345.
PIB
11
Antenna
Gringo
Cardia
scenario
Brazil the
investor
HANDOUT
THE GOOD RESULTS posted in the first
two months of 2010 have led the Brazilian
Central Bank to triple its expectation of direct Brazilian investment abroad for 2010,
from US$5bn to US$15bn. In February
alone, Brazilian companies invested a net
amount of US$4.2bn abroad, a record for
the month and also more than the amount
of foreign direct investment (FDI) received
by Brazil in the period.
London calling
installation
of painter
Ernesto Neto
12
PIB
Considered one of the world’s biggest B2B e-commerce platforms, the Chinese portal Alibaba.com,
in partnership with Hong Kong-based multinational
Ludatrade, now has a physical presence in Brazil.
Note: in China, Ali Baba is associated with “taking
advantage of opportunities”, and not to the famous
40 thieves. The focus of Alibaba.com is the internationalization of small and medium companies, to
which it offers 47 million global users interested in
making purchases – of which almost 7 million are
companies (mostly small or medium-size) who pay
to have their information endorsed by the portal,
and for technological and market support.
it was China’s turn and in 2009 India lit up the city with
its art and culture. According to HSBC, the mission is to
spread knowledge of other cultures, mainly of emerging
markets. On the literary scene, the traditional London
Literature Festival will be incorporated into this year’s
event with the participation of writer Milton Hatoum,
poet and musician Arnaldo Antunes and young writers
João Paulo Cuenca and Tatiana Salem Levy. Gringo Cardia wil l also be one of the highlights of the festival, with
his graphic design expos and street art that promise to
light up Southbank.
ANDRÉ CONTI/HANDOUT
GIL, BETHANIA, AFRO-REGAEE, Mutantes... Brazil’s
UK embassy has named a heavyweight team to ensure
that Brazilian culture gains space in the British agenda (see
text on page...). The Brazil Festival, set to take place in the
upcoming European summer season, will take to London
leading names from Brazilian popular music and prominent Brazilian performers in the fields of visual arts, dance,
literature and cinema. A quick summary of the good things
Brazil has to offer and which deserve to be seen. Not even
graffiti, an omnipresent artistic expression in Brazil’s main
cities, will be missing.
The festival promises to be the longest Brazil-dedicated
event ever seen in the city – lasting almost three
months, from 19 June to 5 September, and coinciding
with the European vacation season and the relaxed
mood in the city.
Shows, debates and expos will take place at indoor
venues, such as the Royal Festival Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Hayward Gallery and Purcell Room, and also
outdoors – at the Southbank Centre (England’s main art
center). This is the third year in which HSBC, event sponsor, will take emerging market arts to the UK. In 2008,
Abracadabra!
HANDOUT
Brazilian art is taking over
the London summer scene
singer
Tom Zé
20 employees working in three offices in Brazil
(São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Brasília) are already
offering these services. “By 2011, we will have offices in over 10 Brazilian cities”, predicts Kenneth
Ma, CEO of Ludatrade. Signing up to these services
will cost around R$ 8,000 a year. The portal offers
interested parties assistance in Portuguese, lists of
potential buyers, help in negotiations and translations, plus other services. For more information go
to: www.ludatrade.com.br <http://www.ludatrade.
com.br/> (Antonio Carlos Santomauro)
PIB
13
HA
ND
OU
T
Antenna
Ravello
auditorium:
audacious
seashore
location
HANDOUT
The
Master’s
Touch
The Oscar of
Gastronomy
14
PIB
HANDOUT
HANDOUT
added value, such as the sparkling wine Lunae and
the range of fine wines: Classic, Volpi, Séries, Talento
and Desejo. With a focus on some extremely competitive markets, such as European countries, we need
to do more than just provide a good product, as we
need to surprise the consumer with the quality of our
products. “The image of Brazil as a producer of wine
and sparkling wine is a relatively recent development, a factor that has effectively capped any larger
business volumes”, said Salton, The reason? “Most
consumers expect Brazilian products to have an
exotic flavor or tropical taste. For this reason young
aromatic, fruity wines with little wood are those that
please the market the most”.
FOR A CHEF and writer, it is like winning an Oscar. The
chef and researcher from Sao Paulo, Ana Luiza Trajano, was
awarded the Gourmand World Cook Book Award in Paris, the
only international prize for publications about gastronomy.
The recognition for the best book on gastronomy in the world
was given to the book “Brasil a Gosto –Tastes of Brazil”, the
same name as her restaurant in São Paulo. “Brasil a gosto”
is part of the research project “Sabores do Brasil – Flavors of
Brazil”, which led to the author embarking on a cultural tour
of the north, northeast and southeast of the country, visiting
47 cities, to really get to know the cultural wealth and local
gastronomic delights.
In their own tongue
Barrels of wine
at Salton’s
main vinyard
in Bento
Gonçalves
Is the number the wine producer Salton from Rio Grande
do Sul plans to export in the next five years…
The way forward chosen by vintner Salton to get export orders was to attend international wine fairs.
According to company management, 80% of its
exports originate from these sources. The purpose
now is to internationalize the brand further, with
the aim of ensuring 5% of revenue can be attributed exports in the next five years. “We are going
to make a big bet on the export market and we are
restructuring our export department, with a larger
team dedicated to international business, with the
intention of increasing our presence in the export
market”, said planning manager, Maurício Salton.
The company hopes to sell approximately 100,000
bottles overseas, and particularly wines of a higher
UMBERTO E ANDREA GALLUCCI/WWW.BBPHOTOS.IT
ONE OF OSCAR Niemeyer’s grandest works
was inaugurated at the beginning of this year, and
one that is sure to become an architectural inheritance for generations to come. The auditorium named
after the architect is in Ravello, a small but beautiful city on
the Amalfitana coast in Italy, and which set the stage for an
intense debate about the interaction between Niemeyer’s modernism and the traditional local houses over a hundred years old. In the
shape of a wave, the array of reinforced cement created by the papal
hand of Brazilian architecture can be seen from afar, as it adorns the top
of a sea cliff. “He was extremely happy with the project”, said architect
Jair Valera, from Niemeyer’s office. At 102, Niemeyer is still working and
already has another international design underway. “We are now working
on the Cultural Center at Avila, in Spain”, said Valera.
100,000 bottles
Prize-winning
chef (Ana Luiza
Trajano) and book
SUZANO PAPEL E Celulose plans to conquer China
in Mandarin. To make this Project feasible, the Brazilian multinational has added a Mandarin version to its
website, which is already available in English and Spanish. The company’s aim is not just to make commercial
relations easier, as there has also been a rising level of
interest in this market in general and Suzano in particular. According to management, China is soon likely to
become one of the main markets for wood pulp in the
sector. The country currently imports 8.6 million tons of
pulp per year, and almost a third of this is from Brazilian
producers. Chinese demand for market and Eucalyptus
pulp rose by 55.4% and 86.9% in 2009, respectively.
Combined with the growth in the Latin-American
market, these increases were enough to compensate for
the drop in demand from the markets in Europe and the
United States.
PIB
15
Antenna
Organic
acerola
juice:
success
3 questions about Global education
MONEY MAY BE the next item on the list of Brazilian
exports. The Brazilian Mint, the institution responsible for producing the Brazilian currency notes and
coins, as well as other official documents, is looking
to expand and diversify its customer base around the
world. The changes in equipment required to produce
the new real notes – which are more sophisticated and
safe; and which go into circulation in June – provided
an opening to take advantage of the institution’s new
installed capacity to produce simpler notes of lower
denominations.
Although undoubtedly a national symbol for any
country, producing their currency is not always an
economically feasible business. According to Sidney
Gasparini, director of international Sales at the
Brazilian Mint, having and maintaining an active
Mint is only recommended for countries with more
than 30 million inhabitants. “In South America,
only Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia and Venezuela have their own mints”, says Gasparini. The list
of the Mint’s potential clients includes 23 neighboring countries in South and Central America (the
Caribbean included) and six in Lusitania.
The first clients to have their currencies minted
in Brazil are likely to be Argentina and Venezuela,
which is scheduled to take place before September
of 2010. Even though these countries can produce
their own currencies, they have come to Brazil because of the recent upgrade in its equipment. Given
this, the Mint is now expecting a flood of orders.
The country currently produces 3 billion notes annually, although the target in the next eight years
is 5.5 billion per year. It is thus estimated that
60% of this production will be exported. To make
this project feasible, the institution has invited
representatives from several countries to visit its
money-making factory in Brazil. “We are showing
our new face to the world, to attract clients to get
to know what is on offer in our industrial park”,
stated Gasparini.
Employee
of Brazilian
National
Mint: money
for other
countries
16
PIB
HANDOUT
The origins of the
Brazilian Mint
FOUNDED IN 1694, the Brazilian Mint
was created by the Portuguese to produce
gold coins from the precious metal mined
in the country. At the time, the growth in
trade began to cause monetary chaos due
to the lack of local supplies of coins. The
Mint produced its first coins a year after it
was set up, which gradually replaced the
various other currencies that circulated
in the country. Between 1975 and 2005,
the institution maintained an exporting
division, which supplied the demand of
ten countries during this 30-year period.
The last order, five years ago, was a medal
(badge of honor) ordered by Angola.
HANDOUT
Cash for Export
THE ORGANICS BRASIL PROJECT
million
PARTICIPATING
EXPORT
YEAR
COMPANIES
VOLUME
2005
12
US$ 9,5
2006
33
US$ 15
2007
42
US$ 21
2008
64
US$ 58
2009
74
US$ 44,3
20101Q
74
US$ 8
Say no to agrotoxins!
More than US$8 million
of organic products were
exported in 1Q10
The Brazilian sector for organic products exported a total of approximately US$8 million
in the first quarter of this year alone. This is
largely the result of companies in the sector
having attended two important international
trade fairs. The Organics Brasil project, a
partnership between Apex-Brasil (The Brazilian Agency for the Promotion of Exports and
Investments) and IPD (The Institute for the
Promotion of Economic Development), intends to take part in eight international trade
fairs this year, one more than last year.
The largest fair for organic products is the
Biofach in Nuremberg, always held in February, and Organics Brasil was represented by
11 associated companies, which closed deals
worth US$6.2 million. At Expo West, in March
in California, another US$1.8 million of orders
were taken. At the end of April, the Brazilian
organic companies will be in Sial, Canada.
The volume of exports in the sector quadrupled in 2009 compared with 2005
(see table above).
3 QUESTIONS ABOUT GLOBAL EDUCATION
UNICAMP WAS THE only university in South America to take
part in the fourth edition of Going Global, a conference about
the models used in the internationalization of education held
in London last March. For Leandro R. Tessler, the coordinator of
International and Institutional Relations (Cori) at the university
and who took part in the meeting, “it is fundamental for the
country’s development that its best institutions can offer an
international dimension”. Tessler answered the following questions asked by PIB:
1. In what way can the internationalization of the student help improve the quality of Brazilian universities?
Internationalization goes way beyond the student. At
the beginning of this new millennium, knowledge is more
and more linked to development. Brazil is already well
on its way on an irreversible trajectory in the sense that
it is playing an increasingly more important role on the
world stage. As such, it is fundamental for the country’s
development that its best institutions of higher learning
have a truly international dimension; and one that can be
expressed in international research and development projects, for example. This particular dimension also needs to
involve the students, in that exposure to different cultures
is a way of qualifying them and opening new doors in the
market. In addition, exposing Brazilian universities in
general to international qualities and standards qualifies
them better on all fronts.
2. What qualifications can these students get abroad
that they cannot get here?
The main aim of internationalization is not to try and offer
qualifications that do not exist here, but to open the door
to a two-way cultural interexchange. It is just as important to send students abroad as it is to receive them from
other countries. Exposure to a diverse environment is a
challenge that qualifies both Brazilians and foreigners and
creates lasting cultural ties.
3. For those who believe internationalization should be
part of their studies, what is the best time in a person’s
career to include this?
During graduate studies, and I would recommend that
students avoid experiencing this in the first and last years
of the course. As far as post graduates are concerned, the
ideal situation is to do part of a research project abroad.
But more important than the moment, is the realization
that it is important to experience an intellectual challenge
that will have life-long consequences.
PIB
17
Antenna
Not even Rio de
Janeiro’s image
on classic London
taxi cabs...
EMBRATUR
Argentina
Tough path ahead
The Brits haven’t yet discovered Brazil’s potential as a tourist destination
BRAZIL, THE COUNTRY of sunshine, soccer, beautiful women and sensational beaches, right? Maybe,
but the stereotype doesn’t seem to be enough to attract visitors from the UK. According to Skyscanners, a
flight comparison site, Brazil doesn’t even rank among
the 50 most popular and attractive tourist destinations for Brits.
The survey, taken on the Skyscanners site itself,
one of the biggest in Europe, features countries
such as Thailand, India and the US among its top
15, while Britain´s neighbors Spain, France and
Portugal are in the top 10.
According to company director, Barry Smith, the
global crisis led Brits to prefer European vacations.
The more adventurous British travelers went as far
as tested and approved destinations such as India
and Thailand.
Another survey, taken by British Airways (which
offers daily flights to Brazil), confirms the difficulty:
the 10 most attractive locations for British tourists,
according to BA, include Egypt, the Maldives, the
Dominican Republic and South Africa, with Brazil
EMBRATUR
...or posters showing its beautiful landscape
are attracting Brits over to Brazil
again nowhere to be seen. The Brits still seem to
see us as too exotic or too much of an unknown to
risk their carefully planned vacations.
The Head of the Tourism Sector of the Brazilian
Embassy in the UK, Igor Flávio de Aguiar Germano,
signals out one of the possible causes: several
of the best-ranked destinations are excellently
served by direct flights from the UK, whereas Brazil
doesn’t offer the same range of options, forcing
willing tourists to fly with airlines offering stopovers in Spain, France or Portugal.
“Insufficient infrastructure is a problem affecting
the entire Brazilian economy”, says Germano. “It
seems clear that Brazil will only progress in this
area if investments are made in better highways,
airports, hotels and more direct flights between the
UK and Brazil.”
So, how to make Brazil an irresistible country to
British tourists? It’s not all bad news: according to
Embratur, which reports that the number of Brits
traveling to Brazil has risen: from 169,627 in 2006
to 181,179 in 2008. The Iguaçu waterfalls were
also voted the best international tourist attraction
in a survey by The Guardian.
These are signs that progress is possible. Coherent
and constant improvements in infrastructure, advertising and marketing (and lots of direct flights!)
would of course help turn things around; especially
with the enormous tourism opportunity created by
the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics. And after
rooting for success, it´s always worth taking a trip
down to the Iguaçu waterfalls. (Nara Vidal, London)
BRAZILIAN HOSPITAL EQUIPMENT manufacturers are complaining of abuse and disrespect in international agreements when it seeks the necessary certification to export to Argentina. Dabi Atlante, for example,
states that it is necessary to repeat the onerous testing
process in the importing country and as already carried
out by Anvisa (The National Sanitary Safety Agency).
“This represents a non-tax import barrier placed
specifically in Brazil’s way “, notes Paulo Passarini, the
company’s quality guarantee manager.
Another company in the sector, Fanem, to sell its
incubators in the neighboring country also has to
repeat these tests, and the only alternative is to present the European Community certificate, together
with the individual certification or with proof of direct
sale in a country included in this trading block. “It
is practically impossible to prove a direct sale as we
largely sell our products to distributors”, states José
Osvaldo Flosi, Fanem’s export manager. “The registration process in a European country is extremely
costly”, he adds.
According to Hely Maestrello, the executive director
of Abimo (the Association of Medical and Hospital
equipment), similar requirements are being imposed
on Argentineans interested in selling their products
in Brazil. The representatives of the Brazilian companies contest this information. Whatever the real
scenario, the dispute rages on. Maestrello recommends: “Whoever wants to export to Argentina
should be prepared to repeat the certification tests in
the country”. Anvisa has not commented on the matter to date. (Antonio Carlos Santomauro)
The Vision incubator and
the pre-natal equipment
manufactured by Fanem
HANDOUT
Baby Índia
FANEM, A MANUFACTURER of hospital equipment based in Guarulhos, in
Greater São Paulo, intends to
inaugurate its first pre-natal
equipment plant outside
Brazil in 2011. The company
chose India as the location
for this new facility – and,
this decision was partly
based on the huge Indian
market, which currently has
a population of 1.2 billion
inhabitants. The estimated
investment for this plant is
around US$5 million. With
the Brazilian market saturated, the company is looking
for more international
clients. Fanem already exports to 93 countries, which
together represented 35% of
its total revenue in 2009.
PIB
19
A view from Capitol Hill
FLÁVIA CARBONARI
CASADPHOTO/ DREAMSTIME.COM
On the
Grey List?
Cotton
plantations
in the US:
under
pressure
A Rocky Road
A standoff in trade sanctions and differences in
foreign policy have dampened the relationship
between Brazil and the United States
Hillary and
Lula, in
Brasília:
tense
climate
persists
20
PIB
FABIO RODRIGUES POZZEBOM/ABR
The saga of Brazilian trade retaliation against the United States authorized by the World Trade Organization
(WTO) based on the dispute over U.S.
cotton subsidies is not encouraging news for those hoping to see a
“special status” developing between
the two nations. The results of U.S
Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton’s
visit to Brasilia show that bilateral
cooperation still exists, in practice,
but the tendency is growing for this
to be linked to specific questions.
To offset this rather bleak outlook,
the recent signing of a military and
defense agreement indicated the
reopening of dialogue in an extremely
sensitive area. But there are still some
crucial sticking points: “Brazil is seen
by the U.S. as a stabilizing force on
the continent, but the tension is still
running high and nerves are frayed,
largely due to the criticism of Brazilian
dialogue with Iran, the deadlock at
Doha, U.S. agricultural subsidies, and
the annual revision of the Generalized System of Preferences by U.S.
Congress”, said Deputy Mauricio
Rands (PT-PE), joint-president of the
Brazil-EUA Parliamentary Group.
Peter Hakim, president of InterAmerican Dialogue and an expert
on Latin America in Washington, is
optimistic. “Given time, you will see
Brazil and the United States sharing
more and more common interests,
and thus the relationship between
the two will be cemented naturally,
largely for economic motives and not
due to any political or ideological
convergence”. Brazil is currently the
tenth largest trading partner with
the U.S., and bilateral trade between
the two countries has grown more
in the last few years than with any
other large emerging market
In the middle of the scrimmage
with Brazil about cotton, the U.S.
government is preparing to release
its annual revision of the Special
301 Report, a controversial mechanism published by the USTR and
that has been in use since 1989 to
pressure other countries to adopt
intellectual property rights policies and reinforce compliance with
them. The document evaluates
the national laws of U.S. trading
partners and their levels of compliance, classifying countries into
three main categories. In 2009, the
Report analyzed 77 countries and
listed 46 in one of these categories. Brazil was put into the third
as a country on the “watch list”,
the least severe of the three. The
Brazilian private sector has mobilized itself to defend the country in
any revision of Special Report 301.
In a petition of almost 20 pages,
Fiesp, the CNI, the Coalition of
Brazilian Industries in Washington
and the Brazil-U.S. Business Council
requested that the USTR remove
Brazil from the list. The document
illustrated the advances made
in Brazil in terms of establishing
protective policies for intellectual
property rights and creating entities
to monitor pirating and smuggling
(contraband goods). But the other
side has also stated its case - the
International Intellectual Property
Alliance (IIPA), an entity with ties
to American industry, sent a 16page recommendation to the USTR
asking for Brazil to be kept on the
watch list. The IIPA argues that
Brazil could break patents or reduce
royalty payments if it decides to use
cross retaliation against the United
States in the case of the cotton
sanctions it has won. Democrat and
Republican leaders of the Senate
Agricultural Committee added fuel
to this particular fire, threatening
to “reconsider the benefits that the
country receives as a result of its
preferential trade programs with
the U.S.”.
More Brazilians
around and about
WITH BRAZIL’S INCREASED international
exposure and the presidential election drawing near,
the number of events and
specialists dedicated to the
country in Washington has
risen dramatically. One example of this is the presence
of the FGV’s coordinator of
its Center of International
Studies, Matias Spektor,
at the headquarters of the
Council on Foreign Relations, in the first semester of
2010. The Brazilian Institute
at the Wilson Center is also
currently hosting Leslie
Bethel, an English historian
with roots in Rio, and the
Center intends to maintain
a resident Brazilian scholar
from now on.
Kirk, head of USTR:
key figure
Who’s the Boss?
THE CENTRAL ROLE of U.S. trade policy resides with the Legislative branch of power.
As such, decisions about any potential counter measures against Brazil in retaliation for
sanctions imposed as a result of the cotton-subsidies case have effectively split Congress. Two Executive bodies implement what the Legislature decides: first is the Department of Commerce, which is responsible for foreign trade policy, and that includes
the programs to promote and finance exports, the defense of trade and controlling
exports. The second body is the Office of the United States Trade Representative – the
infamous USTR, which is the chief adviser to the President on international trade issues
and responsible for all international negotiations. The current USTR chief is the former
mayor of Dallas, Ron Kirk, a key figure in the relationship between Brazil and the U.S.
Think-Tanks
THE FUNDAÇÃO GETÚLIO Vargas is
the most influential private institution
responsible for public policy research in
Latin America, according to a study carried out by the University of Pennsylvania. FGV is rated the 28th best think-tank
in the world in the ranking released in the
study. Chile’s Center of Policy Studies is
ranked number 47, and is the only other
Latin American institution in the top 50.
The top three are North American: the
Brookings Institution, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
USTR
News from the United States with a Brazilian slant
PIB
21
Brands
Far from family and
friends, expatriate
Brazilians try to ease
their homesickness
by buying Brazilian
products. Who
would believe that
Guaraná Antarctica
can be bought in a
small convenience
store in a gas
filling station in
Switzerland?
Ana Luísa (in
red coat) and
a friend in
front of the
Belém Tower
in Lisbon:
overcoming
homesickness
S U Z A N A C A M A R G O,
ZUR IQUE
of home
N
ot long ago Brazilians who lived abroad
would arrive back in
Brazil on holiday with
a list of food and drinks
ready to help ease their homesickness back their native soil. This list
would include feijoada stew and
churrasco barbecued meat, cheese
puffs, guava jelly, tapioca, deepfriend pastries traditionally served
in street markets known as pasteis,
chicken snacks fried in pastry made
22
PIB
with potato... and guaraná.
Guaraná is a drink produced
from the extract of an Amazon
fruit and it can be consumed in
many ways – as a syrup, juice or
soft drink. The Guaraná Antarctica
soft drink has become the particular favorite of the homesick, expatriate Brazilians. Finding guaraná
on other continents was a rare and
expensive pleasure for many years.
However, things have changed and
it has become increasingly easier to
find the green cans containing the
drink, thanks the wave of popularity
about Brazil and its products abroad
as well as the initiative of some foreigner entrepreneurs who have
started to pay attention to a demand
which had not been met before.
The Brazilian journalist Ana
Luisa Machado is married to a
Portuguese and has been living in
the Estoril area of Portugal since
2005. When she moved there she
found Guaraná Antarctica in su-
permarkets, stores selling Brazilian
products and in some restaurants
and eating places. “It’s a unique
taste which reminds me of Brazil.
Whenever I drink it, I remember
the popcorn advertisement with
guaraná,” she says in a reference to
a famous advertising campaign run
by Guaraná Antarctica in Brazil in
1991. “The Portuguese know it is a
soft drink from Brazil and I think
we Brazilians are the ones who
mainly buy it here,” she adds.
PERSONAL ARCHIVES
Flavor
Guaraná Antarctica has been
produced under license in Portugal
since 2001 by Sumol + Compal, a
company with a strong presence in
Portugal and neighboring countries
in Europe.
It offers the drink in PET bottles
of 1.5 liter and 0.33 liter cans and
Guaraná Antarctica sales in Portugal come to around 5 million liters
a year. The partnership between
InBev and Sumol has led the Brazilian drink to become much more
accessible throughout Europe and
lowered the price to the consumer.
The store price of guaraná ranges
from 2.40 to 3.40 Reais. The price of
the drink in Portugal is practically
the same in others in that category,
says Ana Luísa.
Guaraná was originally launched
in 1921 by Companhia Antarctica
Paulista and at that time was called
Guaraná Champagne. For years, the
bottle and then the green can with
the red berry on the label became a
permanent feature in the ranking of
Brazil’s favorite drinks. The merger
between Brahma and Antarctica in
1999 led to the creation of Ambev,
the new holder of the brand. In
turn, Ambev merged with the Belgian company Interbrew in 2004
and created InBev which became a
global giant in the drinks area, particularly beer.
Even after so many mergers,
the flavor of Guaraná Antarctica
remains the same. The fruit from
which the soft drink is produced
comes from the Santa Helena plantation in Maués, a small town in
the interior of Amazônia state. It
has been the second most popular
soft drink sold on the Brazilian market for decades – losing out only to
Coca-Cola. In fact, Guaraná Antarc-
EUROPEAN
NON-ALCOHOLIC
DRINKS MARKET
In the first semester of 2009 (R$)
:: Turnover: 150 million euros
:: Volume: around 293 billion liters
:: There are 1,128 soft drink
companies and 1,071 production
plants in Europe
Source: Unesda – Union of European Beverages
Associations – June 2009
PIB
23
Brands
In Europe, Brazilian specialties used to be found only in small
outlets which sold typical products
from foreign countries. In guaraná´s
case, these were in small Brazilian,
Portuguese, Indian or South American stores. In Switzerland, for example, where the Portuguese form
the second-largest
group of immigrants,
there are many restaurants, bars and
outlets to meet the
needs of the community and, following
this tradition, they
used to sell Brazilian drinks.
This is the case
with Delícias de Portugal, a store
which has been selling the Brazilian soft drink since it opened in Zurich a year ago. However, nowadays
it is not only the traditional places
that offer guaraná. For example,
about 300 meters from Delícias de
Portugal, the convenience store in
Brazilian
guaraná is
consumed in
Europe as a
high-energy
drink
AN EYE ON THE EMERGING COUNTRIES
A STUDY BY THE RESEARCH
company Euromonitor International shows that the future of the
carbonated drinks market is in the
hands of five countries: Brazil, China, Mexico, South Africa and the
United States. The survey shows
that these countries will represent
24
PIB
55% of world growth in the sector
in the coming two years.
There is also expected to be an
increase in sales of around 16%
in these markets this year. The
optimistic figures are due to the
population growth in these regions, the higher purchasing power
The green cans
on the shelves
of the Coop, the
second-largest
supermarket
chain in
Switzerland:
HANDOUT
From Portugal to Europe
a Shell filling station also has it on
its shelves.
“All the distributors of Portuguese products have guaraná,” says
Fátima Silvestre, the owner of Delícias de Portugal. “I sell it mainly to
Brazilians but the Portuguese and
Swiss also buy it because they think
it is a different drink and like to try
it out,” she says. The convenience
store agrees. “It is a drink that sells
well,” says Ralph Gsell, representative of the distributor which supplies products to the Shell stores.
And it is not just the small retailer who sees the sales attraction of
Brazilian guaraná. The second-largest retail chain in Switzerland, the
Coop, has been selling Guaraná Antarctica since 2007.
“We are very
pleased with the
sales of this product. Around 600 of
our 800 supermarkets, as well as the
Coop convenience
stores, offer Guaraná,” says Bernhard Studer, the
Coop´s drinks manager.
Sales of the Brazilian soft drink
have exceeded the Swiss supermarket chain´s expectations. Studer
admits that the company does not
know the exact profile of the consumers of the products but thinks
SUZANA CAMARGO
tica is on the list of the 15 best-selling drinks in the whole world. To
achieve this, a sales agreement with
Pepsi Co. was signed in 2001 as an
initial step to make the product international. The American company
began to make, bottle and distribute
guaraná in a number of countries.
they are Latin Americans who live
in Switzerland, Swiss travelers
who have tried it on trips to South
America or simply people who are
attracted by the name guaraná. “I
haven’t tried it personally but my
and the establishment of efficient
distribution networks. Johanna
Iivonen, a soft drinks market
analyst at Euromonitor International, believes those companies
which bet on innovative products
or strong brand positioning among
the new consumers will be those
which have the highest profitability and growth.
niece, who is the daughter of a Bolivian, is very proud to find guaraná
in the Coop store. It attracts consumers who appreciate it as a highenergy as well as a sweet drink.”
Another large European chain
which decided to invest in the taste
of the Brazilian drink is Spain´s El
Corte Inglés. Guaraná has been on
the shelves since it opened its first supermarket in Portugal in 2001. It was
initially seen as an exotic product but
this view changed. “The consumers
of Guaraná Antarctica were mainly
Brazilians at first but we have seen
an increase in consumption by Portuguese,” says Sara Nogueira, the external relations manager of El Corte
Inglés. While guaraná is a permanent
product in the company´s Portuguese the informal advertising network
outlets, it is only sold in specific cam- formed by expatriate Brazilians is
paigns in Spain.
doing a good job of filling in the gap
An interesting aspect of this re- in terms of professional marketing.
cent growing popularity of Guar- Adjane Selva, who is originally from
aná Antarctica in some European Bahia and has been living in Europe
countries is that InBev has invest- for five years, has introduced the flaed no resources in it. There have vor of the Amazon drink to all her
been no advertising or marketing Swiss family. “My husband loves it
campaigns on the product. (When and my brother-in-law uses it as a
contacted, InBev said it had no in- high-energy drink when he practicformation available on sales of guar- es sport or is tired,” she says. “I also
aná abroad.) Sumol + Compal works like to buy it when we have guests
with the brand essentially with the or I prepare a really Brazilian dish.”
trade marketing in Portugal. The One of the biggest fans of guaraná
company regards the product as still in the Selva household is little Elisa
in the growth stage and a long way who is three and was born in Zurich.
from coming to maturity.
“She always asks for some Antártica
However, it looks as though guaraná,” says Adjane with a smile.
PIB
25
Television
Globo soap
operas: products
sold throughout
the world
Led by Globo, Brazil is advancing
in exports of TV content
JOSÉ RUY GANDR A
26
PIB
HANDOUT/TV GLOBO
I
t is not easy to export television content in a globalized
world. The dispute in this segment is like facing Goliath
head on. The United States alone is responsible for 80% of
all audiovisual content in the world. The remaining 20% of
the share is fought over ferociously by almost 100 countries.
Despite this, Brazil has been making outstanding advances in this
area – to such an extent that it now has an enviable tradition in the
sector. TV Globo is responsible for the lion´s share of this conquest.
It began selling some of the best content from its network abroad at
the end of the 70s in a rather low key way. However, the business
grew to such an extent that three decades later it has exported
hundreds of program in different formats to over 200 countries.
PIB
27
Television
Another broadcaster, Rede Record, is also making advances on
foreign markets although at a slightly more modest rate. Around 18 soap
operas produced by the network,
such as Prova de Amor, Essas Mulheres and Bicho do Mato, have been
exported to 45 countries, including
France, Italy, Turkey and Lithuania.
There are 145 cable TV stations
which show or have already shown
one of the company´s soap operas.
Oddly enough, the best seller is
Record´s version of the soap opera
Escrava Isaura which was originally
shown on Globo.
28
PIB
100
TERRA NOSTRA
95
O CLONE
91
ESCRAVA ISAURA
79
LAÇOS DE FAMÍLIA
77
POR AMOR
76
PÁGINAS DA VIDA
66
MULHERES APAIXONADAS 62
ANJO MAU
62
SINHÁ MOÇA
61
DA COR DO PECADO
TV GLOBO / GIANNE CARVALHO
1o
2o
3o
4o
5o
6o
7o
8o
9o
10o
being shown in Cuba and Israel.
Páginas da Vida is the audience
leader in Kazakhstan and O Clone,
one of Globo´s world blockbusters (see ranking on page...) was an
enormous success in places such
as Macau and Azerbaijan. Miniseries like Amazônia, Chiquinha
Gonzaga and Carandiru are shown
in a number of European and Latin
American countries. These appealing programs are translated into 43
different languages. Latin America
is the network´s main market and it
is rare to find a country that does
not show at least one product created by TV Globo.
In another sign of the vitality
and growth of the sector, a number
of independent producers are following the path opened by Globo
and starting to export their content
to foreign cable TV stations. For
example, O2, a production company from São Paulo which has the
cinema director Fernando Meirelles
among its partners, has exported its
series Cidade dos Homens to over
a dozen countries. Others, such as
Conspiração from Rio de Janeiro
and Bossa Nova and Mixer from São
Paulo, produce documentaries and
series for cable TV stations in Brazil
and abroad.
never before. There are currently
three series produced in Brazil for
cable TV which have been highly
successful abroad. For example, the
Discovery Kids channel transmits
shows two cartoons made in Brazil throughout Latin America and
other countries. One is A Princesa
do Mar, created by the Brazilian animator Fabio Yabu and produced by
the São Paulo company Flamma in
partnership with Southern Star, the
biggest independent producer in
Australia. The other, Os Peixonautas,
is from the producer PinGuim. Both
are leaders in their age ranges and
are already in their second series.
HANDOUT
Number of countries that show TV
Globo´s best-selling soap operas abroad
MUNIR CHATACK/ RECORD
TV GLOBO / ZÉ PAULO CARDEAL
SALES CHAMPIONS
Another São Paulo producer, Mixer,
has its show Escola pra Cachorro
shown daily on the Nickelodeon
channel. “Brazil has taken a great
jump forward in this area, thanks to
the enormous talent of its cartoon
professionals,” says Marcos Altberg,
chairmen of the Brazilian Association of Independent TV Producers.
TV Globo is still miles ahead in
terms of exporting Brazilian television content for the international
market. Although other Brazilian
TV networks like Rede Record or
SBT export some of their productions, Globo is a player with a global
Brazilian
cartoons: Cable
TV successes
HANDOUT/TV PINGÜIM
Record soap
opera: 16
countries
Globo´s
Scalamandré:
“A universal
language”
“We often see programs on famous cable stations like National
Geographic and Discovery without
realizing that the content was produced in Brazil by Brazilians,” says
André Mermelstein, publisher of
the magazine Tela Viva and organizer of the Fórum Brasil, an annual
event dedicated to the international
television market. “The number of
foreigners who have bought Brazilian audiovisual content has more
than doubled over the last four
years,” he adds.
Brazil´s audiovisual production
of cartoons has been expanding as
FABIO YABU
“Brazil has certainly created
its own television language, particularly in the area of soap operas which can be adapted to the
reality of the most different countries,” says Ricardo Scalamandré,
director of Globo´s International
Business Center. In 2009, 65 of
the network´s programs, including
soap operas and mini-series, were
being shown in 83 countries on
five continents. They totaled more
than 2,500 hours of programming,
equivalent to more than 1,200
Hollywood films. For example, the
soap opera A Favorita, is currently
Reynaldo Gianecchini and
Thais Araújo in Da Cor do
Pecado: the most popular
Brazilian global soap opera
presence and stature. Its accelerated
drive into the foreign market began
rather slowly. “The first program
Globo sold abroad was a special edition of Fantástico which was bought
by the Swedish channel SVT2 in
1978,” says José Roberto Filippelli,
who was director of international
sales at that time. With the privatization of the European television
network in the following year, business took off. “These new private
channels were thirsty for new content to fill their listings,” he says.
It was against this heated backdrop that TV Globo came up with its
first international blockbuster, the
PIB
29
HANDOUT/TV GLOBO
Spanish version of O Clone:
tailor-made for the Hispanic
market in the United States
soap opera Escrava Isaura, which
was initially sold to TSI (Televisione Svizzera Italiana). This breakthrough was followed rapidly by
broadcasters in 78 others countries.
The actress Lucélia Santos who
played the lead in the series almost
became an instant celebrity in countries as diverse as
China, Cuba, Spain
and Italy. When the
soap opera was being shown in Italy
it was common to
find graffiti on the
streets of Rome, Milan and Naples saying
“Libertà per Isaura”
(Freedom for Isaura).
The following big successes
were the soap opera Dancing Days
and the program Você Decide sold
to dozens of countries throughout
the world. “In Spain, as soon as
Dancing Days ended, Catalan TV
would present a program to discuss
what had happened in that episode,”
says Filippelli. “It was incredibly
exciting.” These soap operas were
compacted and ran for an average of demands of clients,” he says. TV
30 episodes. Transporting them was Globo´s main rivals in this area in
complicated as the material came in which soap operas predominate
enormous cans of videotape. “They are Mexican networks. Its great
looked like giant pizza containers,” priority is to conquer the Hispanic
Filippelli recalls.
market in the United States. “There
These times were marked by are about 45 million Hispanics in
a certain valiant improvisation the US, about 15% of the populawhich was gradually tion, and they are the main viewers
replaced by a more of soap operas,” Ricardo adds. “In
professional man- 2025, they should represent 40% of
agement and a much the American population.”
more complicated
Besides the soap operas and
operation. “Nowa- mini-series, the licensing area has
days, TV Globo oper- started to cash in with a new prodates on the interna- uct: Brazilian Magic Football – or,
tional market with more simply Foot Brazil. This conthree complementary sists of 80 games from the Brazilarms,” says Ricardo ian football championship, with live
Scalamandré, the GNI director. The commentary in English and profirst is the licensing side in which vided à la carte. “We are promoting
the content sold is the same as that Brazilian football abroad and comproduced for Brazil. “In this case, peting with the English and Spanwe have two advantages. The first ish championships,” Ricardo says.
is the fact that the quality of our “However, we have the advantage
production has been recognized of showing the stars of tomorrow.”
internationally and the second is
The second leg of this tripod
the possibility of customizing the is TV Globo Internacional, also a
products to meet the particular premium à la carte channel, with
Globo´s
soap operas
were initially
sold in
videotape
cans
30
PIB
HANDOUT/TV RECORD
Television
Record´s Bicho do Mato:
the network exports to
over 40 countries
PFC or Premier Combate, both
from Globosat. Globo Internacional broadcasts 24 hours a day and
has 550,000 subscribers or around
two million viewers in 115 countries. The channel operates with
five different signals distributed to
the United States, Portugal, Europe,
Africa and Japan. “This allows us
to customize the programming and
the commercial breaks, based on
a highly sophisticated technology,”
Ricardo adds.
Globo Internacional is also trying to strengthen its links with its
public groups by promoting events
called Brazilian Days attended by its
stars in cities with large concentrations of Brazilian immigrants, such
as New York, Lisbon or Tokyo. “Globo is a living memory of their homeland for Brazilians who live abroad,”
he says. This link is very strong. One
good example is the news program
Jornal Nacional which was broadcast live around the world. However,
Brazilians living in Japan were unable to get used to watching it at 8
o´clock in the morning. “They want-
ed to watch it sitting on the sofa in
the same way and time as they did
in Brazil. We started to show it at 8
o´clock in the evening and, although
it was no longer live, people loved it
and our audience increased.”
The latest front to open up in
TV Globo´s international business – and also the
most promising – is
the co-production of
soap operas. “This
area is our blue-eyed
boy,” Ricardo says.
The first heavy investment in this segment was the co-production of the soap
opera O Clone with
the Mexican network Telemundo
(of the NBC group) which is being shown to Hispanic audience
in the United States. “In this case,
the customization is total,” he adds.
Whereas the action in the original
story switched from Morocco to Rio
de Janeiro, the new version links
Morocco and Miami. The actors
are all Hispanics and the recordings
take place in a studio in Colombia.
In these cases TV Globo enters with
what is called product intelligence
which involves the original script,
its adaptation and, above all, the
planning of scenes, costumes and
recording. The second initiative of
this kind was the soap opera Louco
Amor made in coproduction with TV
Azteca which has
also just started to be
screened in Mexico.
“In this case, we rescued a 30-year-old
product and adapted it entirely to the
Mexican reality.”
Although Brazil
may be a long way from becoming
a Goliath in the global audiovisual
business, the situation is changing
rapidly when it comes to products
with television content. The ongoing conquest of new markets and
the diversification of its exporters
show that the country is center
stage, or perhaps we should say
center screen.
The Globo
Internacional
channel has
two million
viewers
abroad
PIB
31
Culture
A new
passion
Hannah
Mallinckrodt,
in the gardens
of King´s
College in
London:
“I love to
dance forró”
The number of foreigners studying Brazilian
Portuguese around the world is on the rise
F L AV I O D E C A R VA L H O S E R PA
A
32
PIB
The number
of students
learning
Portuguese at
Georgetown has
soared from
70 to 200
ERIKA TAMBKE
s a direct side effect of ‘little stop’”; is a much-criticized
Brazil’s growing expo- technique of taking a penalty kick
sure in the internation- “designed to throw off the goalkeeper's
al media, knowledge of timing”.
“the Brazilian people”
Besides the spontaneous interest
and Brazilian Portuguese has been at- being shown in Brazil as a result of
tracting increasing attention world- its increased presence in the media,
wide. This global interest, previously the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has
fed mainly by music and sport, has been trying to encourage people to
been further nourished by the coun- learn the Portuguese language. The
try’s significant presence of the so- cultural department of Itamaraty
called BRICS group of emerging na- currently coordinates and pays for
tions, the choice of Rio de Janeiro to 53 leitorados, the name given to lanhost the 2016 Olympic Games, and guage teachers overseas subsidized
the fact that Brazil is holding the by the Ministry. There were 45 such
2014 Football World Cup.
teachers working in 36 different
Brazil, which almost only ap- countries in 2008 (compared with
peared in the international news 30 in 2006). Itamaraty registered
for its glaring inequality in terms of 27,292 students enrolled in Portudistribution of income and other ills guese language courses throughout
associated with economic stagna- the world in 2009. The expansion of
tion, is now talked about positively the foreign language teaching netin the media. The Americans no work is a good example of how Bralonger confuse Brazil’s capital with zilian language and culture is being
Buenos Aires, as they did in the past. promoted in terms of its availability
They have even dabbled in the Por- and visibility. These measures reach
tuguese language, adopting certain a very specific segment of the local
words without even translating populations in question, and notably
them, as was the case recently in in the academic communities and
the Wall Street Journal in an article among opinion formers.
about Brazilian football: “The paAnd just as one might expect,
radinha (pronounced par-a-JEEN- “Brazilian Portuguese” is also used
ya), which in Portuguese means in the social networks on the In-
ternet, the truly modern and dy- tution that is considered among the
namic disseminators of fashions top 25 best universities in the world;
and trends – as well as in many of and the fourth oldest in England.
the services offered. On Facebook,
It is true to say that this new
the largest of these networks, a trend is most clearly seen in the
community has just been created academic world. In 2002, Georgecalled Learn Brazilian Portuguese, town University in Washington
which has attracted 700 members only had 70 students of Portuguese
from around the world in only a few a year, a number that has risen to
weeks. A survey carried out among more than 200. According to Bryan
the users about the reasons for their McCann, director of the Brazilian
interest in Brazilian Portuguese Studies Program at the university,
reveals several motivating factors. Brazil’s growing presence in the
Among the followers are girls who international scenario has led to an
love Brazilian music or the martial increase in interest in the country.
art, capoeira, students preparing for “We have had to restructure our deacademic field work in Brazil and partment to cater for this growing
professionals on the lookout for demand”, says Bryan. “We currently
business opportunities.
offer three courses for graduate and
Teacher Megpost-graduate students,
wen Loveless, one
about Brazilian culture,
of founders of the
politics and history, as
group Por aqui,
well as five Portuguese
has also dedicated
classes”.
herself to spreadIn the past, gening the word, so to
erations of so-called
speak, having com“Brazilianists” used to
pleted her Ph.D.
graduate without even
about the dance
really dominating the
forró, and who curPortuguese language,
rently teaches Poras all the classes were
tuguese at Princeton, in New Jersey, given in English. This is no longer
one of the elite so-called Ivy League the case at Georgetown: “We are the
universities in the United States.
only university in the United States
The interest in Brazilian culture that offers classes about Brazilian
was captured almost subliminally by history and politics in Portuguese,”
the playwright and author from São Bryan proudly adds. One of the top
Paulo, Jhaira, his stage name that universities in the U.S., particularly
means “river of honey” in the indig- in the area of international relations,
enous Tupi language. “It is a really Georgetown is a kind of workshop
Indian tradition, with no surname”, or think-tank for the country’s inhe jokes. After a season immersed in ternational politics and diplomacy.
the British drama scene in London, There are currently approximately
Jhaira now coordinates the proj- 6,000 students enrolled in its graduect Com a palavra (With the Word), ate courses and another 1,500 studyan Internet program that tries to ing post-graduate courses in interbring together groups in different national relations.
countries in Portuguese. The ProjThe interest in Brazilian Porect is enthusiastically supported by tuguese also extends into Canada,
King’s College, an educational insti- another example of international
PIB
33
Culture
HANDOUT
excellence in education. Andréa
Pacheco Pacifico, a teacher of Law
and International Relations in Brazil at York University, Toronto, says:
“The growing importance of Brazil
in international forums has sparked
the interest of more and more foreigners in getting to know the country”. There are students interested
in doing business with the country,
learning about Brazilian culture
and, particularly, the language. As
there is little information in English
to study some very specific areas,
the academics have begun to learn
the language, mainly to be able to
read the original works published
in Portuguese.
One of Andréa’s students, majoring in human rights, did a course on
social movements in Latin America
and decided to write her thesis
about the Landless Movement in
Brazil (MTST). Due to the scarcity
of information about this subject in
English, Andréa said: “She started
to learn Portuguese, to learn more
about the social movements in Brazil”. York University is the third
largest in Canada, with more than
47,000 graduates and more than
6,000 post-graduate students.
On the other side of the pond, the
epicenter of interest in Portuguese
can be found at the red-brick King’s
College. Based in the Center of London, the university has more than
21,000 students from 140 countries
and has just signed an agreement
with the Fundação de Amparo à
Pesquisa (a Research Foundation) in
the State of São Paulo (Fapesp) for
the purposes of cooperation in and
interexchange of academic research.
Mitchell Cutmore, 20, a second-year
language student in German and
Portuguese, delved into several foreign languages before realizing his
passion for Portuguese. “I studied
French, German and even Japanese
at high school. I am now hooked
on Portuguese and cannot imagine
studying anything else”.
Mitchell also fell in love with
Brazilian culture: “What I like the
most at my university is our Portu-
ERIKA TAMBKE
Hannah and her
friends from the
Brazilian
& Portuguese
Society; and a
London newspaper
dedicated to Brazil
34
PIB
guese & Brazilian Society, a gathering
of students from the department of
Lusitanian studies. “We organize
social events, and we sometimes
go to Brazilian bars or restaurants
to drink caipirinhas (a sugar-canebased alcohol drink served in a variety of fruit flavors) and eat coxinhas
(rissoles, small fried croquettes
filled with chicken) and, we dance
the forró on Sundays.” Mitchell has
already made plans for the future,
as, in 2011, he intends to spend a semester in Belo Horizonte, studying
at the Federal University of Minas
Gerais (UFMG) “I follow a couple
of Brazilian journalists on Twitter
and sometimes read their articles
in Portuguese to maintain and improve my language skills”.
Hannah Mallinckrodt, 19, one
of Mitchell’s colleagues at King’s,
believes her interest in Brazil was
handed down through the generations, in her case from her grandfather. “He lives in Belém, in the
State of Pará, and I went to meet
him and his new wife last summer.
I loved Brazilian food, the music
and the country in general”. Hannah said that she learned to dance
the forró and brega, and loves them.
“I think that Brazil is a country that
has a huge amount to offer and it
will undoubtedly play a more important role on the world stage in
the future”. Hannah listens to and
reads about news from Brazil on her
I-pod. The exotic side of Brazil even
attracts people from cultures just as
interesting, if not more so in certain
aspects. And this is the case of the
Indian Amee Virani, 20, in the same
group at Kings: “I love watching capoeira and I am learning to dance
the samba. I would love to spend
six months in Brazil, studying and
travelling. I also have a very goodlooking friend in São Paulo who I
would like to visit”.
PIB
35
Cover Story
MARCO REZENDE
I
t is 8 o´clock at night and the
capital of Angola is steaming hot when the old Boeing 707 of the Brazilian Air
Force lands on the runway
at Luanda airport. It is the first stop
of a four-day trip which will take it
to the capital of Mozambique, Maputo, and the city of Johannesburg
in South Africa. The first passenger
to leave the plane is the minister of
Industry, Trade and Development,
Miguel Jorge, followed by staff
36
PIB
from the Brazilian National Bank ambi (RS), Green Winds, which
for Economic and Social Develop- produces furniture from environment (BNDES), Petrobras and al- mentally certified wood in Belém
most 100 business leaders and ex- (PA) and Brastex, from the town
ecutives from Brazilian companies
of Paulista (PE), a manufacturer of
from all sectors and sizes.
tea cloths and kitchen towels made
The group includes representa- from the waste products of the
tives of corporate giants like Em- textile industry and fabrics. Othbraer, Brasil Foods and Usiminas ers entering the fray, armed with
and ambitious and innovative small projects, samples and catalogues,
and medium-sized firms, such as include executives from some of
Boutique de Aromas, a producer of the largest construction companies
cosmetics and air sprays from Pan- – heavyweights like Queiroz Galvão,
MARCO REZENDE
Brazilian companies, with government backing, are the dominant
players in Angola and Mozambique and are facing Chinese
competition in the promising markets on the African continent
EDUARDO MOODY
The last
Eldorado
Andrade Gutierrez, OAS, Camargo
Correa and Odebrecht.
The aim they all share, encouraged by the Brazilian government,
is to be in the frontline of an offensive to conquer this precious part of
the last relatively unexplored economic frontier in the world - Africa.
This is a market which is growing
fast and ready to welcome businesses with the products, technology, services and loans which the
continent needs.
Pavement in Benguela
and crowded avenue
in Luanda: everything
still to be done in Angola
and Africa as a whole
With the civil wars in Angola and
Mozambique ended and apartheid
buried in South Africa, the southern part of the continent has begun
to take off. Angola has GDP of close
to US$ 100 billion and has been expanding by almost 20% a year since
2005, thanks to its large reserves of
oil which amount to two million barrels a day. Figures from the World
Bank show that Mozambique´s economy is second in terms of the speed
and sustainability of its growth in
the whole of Africa. Growth has
averaged 8.2% over the last 10 years.
Finally, South Africa, a country at
the center of attention as it will be
hosting the World Cup football competition this year, is the largest African economy with a per capita GDP
which is practically equal to that of
Brazil – almost US$ 10,000.
Odebrecht is a trailblazer in Angola, having arrived there in 1984
in the middle of the civil war, and
is now a powerful force locally. It
PIB
37
is the largest employer in the country, with almost 30,000 staff, and
is present in sectors as diverse as
heavy construction, homebuilding, supermarkets, diamond mining, agricultural production and
ethanol. The mining group Vale is
to Mozambique what Odebrecht is
to Angola. Vale is investing US$ 1.3
billion in the Moatize coal mine,
the largest reserve in the southern
SPEARHEADS
HOW BRAZIL´S
TRADE MISSIONS WORK
A SCENE IN AN AFRICAN HOTEL.
With his well-oiled grey hair, tie and
impeccable navy blue blazer which
gives him the look of an English clubman, an elegant gentleman switches
on a mini-grill and begins to cook
and offer the local people a cheese
dish called queijo-coalho which looks
38
PIB
and tastes like the kind sold on the
beaches in the Northeast of Brazil.
This is Paulo Heeg, a representative of Laticínios Tirolez from São
Paulo. At his side, dozens of other
executives from Brazilian companies
are doing similar things with their
intermediaries: showing their products and assessing the possibility of
selling them through regular exports,
creating franchises and, perhaps,
even investing in local plants.
This is another of the trade missions organized by the Ministry of
Development, Industry and Trade
to markets which are promising but
difficult to enter. To go from one
African capital to another means
often changing planes in Europe. “I
explained this to President Lula and
he authorized me to us the presidential jet to take the business leaders
and encourage the international
expansion process,” minister Miguel
In Luanda,
the rich and
the poor
(who live in
“musseques”)
live side by side
Energy is also the business of
Romagnole, from Curitiba, which
has annual revenues of almost R$
400 million from producing distribution transformers and electrical
equipment. Only 10% of sales were
made abroad until now but this percentage will rise as a result of Africa.
Romagnole has signed a contract to
begin producing transformers in
Mozambique in 2010, initially with
parts produced 100% in Brazil. Local partners own 20% of the business. In Angola, the company is
aiming to sell not only products but
also its expertise in management
and training, according with Flávio
Izzo who works in the company’s
international area.
In the region of Catumbela, Pipe
Sistemas Tubulares company, from
Contagem (MG), will begin producing pipes made from Brazilian steel
in 2011. It is starting this project,
which has 50 employees, with the
backing of ApexBrasil, the government agency for promoting exports,
and loans from the BNDES. “The
company was already consolidated
Jorge told PIB. The business leaders
pay their own personal and accommodation costs. The government
banks the organization of the meetings with local business people and
buyers and the transport and flying
logistics. With 80 economy and 20
executive class seats, the old Boeing 707 is surprisingly comfortable
but cannot hide its 42 years. There
are as many mechanics on board as
stewards and stewardesses.
Brazilian
salesmen in
Johannesburg
and buyer in
Maputo: affinity
with Africans
facilitates deals
MARCELLO CASAL JR
continent in 2009. The aim is to
encourage exports and support
direct investment in Africa. The
Financial Times estimates that
Brazilian companies have invested
US$ 10 billion in Africa since 2003.
The trade flow between Brazil and
the members of the South African
Development Community (SADC)
jumped from US$ 1.8 billion in
2004 to US$ 8 billion
in 2008.
Many companies
have benefited from
this increase. “Africa is a continent
with practically no
energy,” says Wilson
Poit who founded
Poit Energia in São
Paulo 10 years ago.
The company now
has subsidiaries in Argentina, Peru
and Chile. Poit provides temporary
infrastructure by hiring out generators, hangars and refrigerated
containers. “We are going to become one of the largest companies
in Latin America and also want to
be in Africa,” he said. There is quite
a big market waiting for him. Only
12% of Angola is electrified and the
system is so precarious that there
are daily blackouts.
MARCELLO CASAL JR
he¬misphere, near the northern
city of Tete. This amount is equivalent to 1/7th of the country´s GDP of
US$ 9 billion. The bus manufacturer Marcopolo from southern Brazil has been in South Africa since
2001 and has two production plants
which export to other African
countries. It enjoyed the sensation
of selling the 460 buses which will
be used for FIFA´s
delegations and VIP
groups during the
2010 World Cup. One
of Marcopolo´s competitors in this dispute was the South
Korean group Hyundai which is one of
the official sponsors
of the event.
“The strategy of
the Lula government to form a close
link between Brazil and Africa and
other developing countries is being
recognized as one of the triumphs
of our foreign policy. This is the
business success of this integration,”
minister Miguel Jorge told PIB.
President Lula has visited 19
African countries since 2003 and
Miguel Jorge organized three
missions with hundreds of business leaders to 11 countries on the
on the Brazilian market and it was
time to go international,” says Luiz
Lapa, the director of operations in
Africa. Pipe began exporting to Angola. “However, exporting pipes is
like exporting air; there is no added
value,” says Lapa.
Another company from Minas
Gerais state which also decided to
invest in the surprising African market to add value to the brand is Xuá,
a producer of mineral water from
Juiz de Fora. Until now it has been
exporting 20 containers a month of
plastic bottles containing 20 liters
to Angola. In a country which has
practically no distribution network
for drinking water, each of these is
sold through retail outlets for US$
25. During the Brazilian trade mission visit, Gian¬Carlo Nardy, the
company’s marketing manager,
reached an agreement with an
Angolan partner to produce in Angola. “We found a partner who is
the owner of a well which has been
Delegation
arrives in Luanda
MARCELLO CASAL JR
Minister
Miguel Jorge,
in Luanda: three
delegations with
businessmen
visited Africa
in 2009
MARCELLO CASAL JR
Cover Story
PIB
39
Cover Story
tested for mineral content. We also
have the support of the Banco Popular de Crédito which will finance
the project.” Nardy says “Africa is
a promising market for those who
have experience in
doing business.”
In 2001, a year
before the agreement which formalized the end of the
civil war, Antonio
Carlos Perruci, an
engineer from Pernambuco created its
own company - ATP
Engenharia – in Luanda. He has
not regretted the decision. “Angola
is a country with great opportunities: it is common for middle-sized
companies to be subcontracted by
large companies and have contracts
worth US$ 80 million to US$ 200
million in their portfolio,” he says.
Perruci believes Brazilian companies have also benefited from the affinities between the two countries,
such as the fact that Angola is following Brazil´s example as a country
with a wide network
of highways.
However, the biggest similarities are
the common Portuguese language and
history itself. Almost
half of the three million Africans taken
to Brazil as slaves
between the 18th
and 19ht centuries came from Angolan territory. “The Angolans like the
Brazilian way of doing things, having a barbecue and playing the guitar,” says Perruci. “At the same time,
when Brazilians are doing business
they talk first of all about families,
then football and only later about the
Africa is a
promising
market for those
experienced in
business
management
business itself. The other foreigners
only speak about business and then
ago away.”
Other Brazilians who are working in Angola have also done well.
Lincoln Nunes, a former employee
of Odebrecht, opened a fast food restaurant in Luanda called Panela de
Barro, which now has a number of
offshoots. Like Lincoln, many other
engineers and executives left their
jobs with Brazilian companies in
Angola to open their own businesses.
They are now present in sectors as
diverse as cleaning, urban transport
and importing quality products.
Others emigrate to become entrepreneurs. Paulo Emmanuel de Albuquerque left Santa Cruz do Capibaribe (PE) for Luanda six years
ago to create the chain of popular
Brasuca stores which is supplied
with clothes and shoes bought in
São Paulo. He now has eight stores
and intends taking its brand to all
the 18 Angolan provinces.
Luanda was a sleepy place with
just over 400,000 inhabitants in the
run-up to independence in the 70s.
However, it now houses more than
five million people due to the arrival
of refugees escaping the fighting in
the interior of the country. The sudden oil wealth has overloaded the
precarious road network which is
now filled with SUVs and thousands
of private cars stuck in interminable
traffic jams. Street traders use the
permanent traffic congestion to sell
mineral water, sunglasses, mobile
phones and even running shoes to
drivers and passengers. The traffic jams are so lengthy that there is
enough time to try on the shoes and
even negotiate the price.
Luanda is a city with a certain
feeling of chaos, disorganization
and precariousness. It is divided be-
tween the cut-off opulent lifestyles
of the small very rich elite who are
portrayed in the weekly magazine
Caras Angola and the poverty of
the majority who live in insalubrious shantytowns
which proliferated
in an uncontrolled
way during the war.
The meeting point of
the rich is the Miami
Beach Club, a luxury
restaurant and disco
in Ilha de Luanda,
the peninsula facing
February Avenue
on the coast. It is owned by Isabel
dos Santos, the oldest daughter of
President José Eduardo dos Santos.
Isabel is regarded as a highly successful businesswoman. The first
lady, Ana Paula Santos, organized
a large charity event in the Miami Beach Club a few months ago
with two guests from Brazil: the
actors Grazi Massafera and Cauã
Raymond. Caras Angola magazine,
controlled by Tchizé dos Santos,
another daughter of the president,
gave it great coverage. Most public
transport is carried out in anarchist fashion by van
drivers known as
candogueiros. The
pavement traders,
known as quínguilas, sell fruits and
all kinds of goods,
sharing space with pedicurists who
treat client’s feet in the open air.
Brazilian diplomats and executives who live in Angola told PIB
magazine that the problems related
to violence or crime in Luanda are
no more serious than in Brazilian
cities. Like Brazil, every commer-
Vale is to
Mozambique what
Odebrecht
is to Angola:
a dominant
presence
40
PIB
HANDOUT/ODEBRECHT
MARCO REZENDE
HANDOUT/ODEBRECHT
HANDOUT
Odebrecht
is on view
everywhere
in Angola:
construction
works,
hydro energy
plants,
office buildings
and the biggest
trade center
in Luanda
PIB
41
cial building, store or residence
has security guards. While waiting for the bus in front of a hotel, in
Comandante Ginka Avenue, some
members of the trade mission saw
the Angolan minister of Tourism,
Pedro Mutindi, walking quietly
along the other side of the street
on his way home – without security guards and limping because of
a prosthesis which replaced a foot
lost in a mining explosion during the
civil war.
A Brazilian consultant who provides engineering
services to companies in Luanda confirms that the business atmosphere is
positive, with full
respect given to contracts and legal insurance. “Even
the payments which were suspended at the height of the world
crisis in the first semester of 2009
have been normalized,” he says. demand, the opportunities in AfThe Angolans like to do business rica are infinite,” says Humberto
at their own rather calm pace. The Rangel, director of business develconsultant also says that the way to opment in Angola. “Everything is
do business always involves part- there to be done,” he says. However,
nerships, generally with companies he says that the African countries
or authorities of the government which offer the best opportunities
of President José Eduardo do dos for Brazilian companies are the one
Santos. He has been in power for 30 with oil wealth, such as Algeria,
years and is ready to be reelected Libya, Egypt, Nigeria, Angola and
for another mandate. He managed some others.
to end the civil war
Angola’s national reconstruction
in 2002 when the plan is a collection of million-dollar
rebel leader Jonas projects to rebuild the country’s inSavimbi died by giv- frastructure which was devastated
ing Savimbi´s main by the civil war. In Luanda, outdoor
followers positions hoardings bearing the Odebrecht
in the Angolan gov- name mark the presence of the
ernment.
company in a large number of these
Odebrecht is projects – such as the capital´s new
one of the most in- international airport, a new avenue
ternationally active which links it to Luanda, the new
Brazilian compa- asphalted highways, residential
nies and is present in two dozen condominiums and hydroelectric
countries. It sees Angola as one projects. “We used to work mainly
of the most diversified and prom- with the government,” said Rangel.
ising markets today. “In terms of “Now there is a growing trend for
Angola’s National
Reconstruction
Program is
a collection of
millionaire
projects
42
PIB
HANDOUT/ODEBRECHT
Petrobras drilling ship
in Angola and
Atlantic Riviera
condo: oil riches is
boosting demand
for good homes
AGENCIA PETROBRAS
Cover Story
more partnerships with private
agencies although the public sector remains extremely important.”
Odebrecht is also entering new
sectors such as industry and agriculture. Biocom, a joint venture
with the state-owned Sonangol
(an Angolan version of Petrobrás)
and the private local group Damer,
is setting up a sugar cane plant to
produce 30 million liters of ethanol,
250,000 tons of sugar and 160,000
megawatts/h of bioelectricity. The
plantation will occupy 30,000 hectares and its initial priority will be
the production of sugar, 100% of
which Angola currently imports.
Another big important partner of
the Brazilian construction company
is the GAM group which belongs
to the Angolan billionaire and jet
setter Antonio Mosquito. The two
companies are working together
in residential and commercial construction projects. The first Angolan shopping center, Belas Shopping
de Luanda, is being constructed by
Odebrecht, as was the first luxury
closed condominium in the country.
Houses with four bedroom suites
are selling for US$ 5 or US$ 6 million dollars and the monthly rent is
never less than US$ 25,000.
In the Catoca diamond-extraction project in the northern region
of Angola, Odebrecht (owner of 17%
of the joint venture) operates in
partnership with the state-owned
company Endiamo,
the Russian group
Alrosa and the Israeli billionaire of
Uzbek origin, Lev
Leviev. He is the
man who ended the
hegemony the South
African company De
Beers had held on
the world diamond
market. Catoca will
have annual revenues of US$ 1 billion from exports. Even with the
decline in the prices in the diamond
market caused by the crisis in 2008,
Catoca is important for Angola as it
employs a lot of labor in a particularly poor part of the country. Until
a few years ago the fuel for the prospectors was brought in by plane.
Now it arrives along a road which
was also constructed by Odebrecht.
The builders and other Brazilian companies in Africa are facing
direct competition from Chinese
companies. “We are used to that
as we have already
faced the Russians,
Americans, Italians
and other strong rivals in various parts
of the world,” says
Odebrecht Rangel. “We can choose
the location, product and client but
not the competitor.” Rangel shows
Odebrecht´s arms: knowledge and
tradition in the market and a greater
capacity for building and creating
local partnership.
Brazilian
companies
in Africa are
facing strong
Chinese
competition
PIB
43
Cover Story
projects amounting to U$ 8 billion,
all of them carried out by Chinese
companies.
However, Rangel says Odebrecht has an important differential
which is social insertion. “Almost
95% of our team of local workers
are Angolans. It is the opposite with
the Chinese where 95% of their
teams come from China,” Rangel
estimates. In fact, at the worksites
LUCIANO ANDRADE
China´s growing influence
around the world is particularly
visible in Africa. The heavyweight
statesman who has visited most African countries after Lula is China´s
leader Hu Jintao. Between 1992 and
2008, the trade flow between China and Africa soared from US$ 4.1
billion to US$ 107 billion. Chinese
companies are building highways,
hydroelectric plants, railways, pub-
pany with a heavyweight in the
two countries is Embrapa. “Our
challenges are similar and we have
to grow together,” said the president of the company, Pedro Arraes
Pereira. “At least 250 million head
of cattle in Brazil feed off tropical
pastures, such as brachiaria originally brought from Africa. Now that
this kind of pasture has been improved, it can return to the African
to enter the steel business in the
biggest strategic turnaround in
the company´s history. (See box on
page 46). The omnipresent Odebrecht is an important partner of Vale
in the Moatize project. Odebrecht
it is responsible for a large part of
the infrastructure works: from the
new international airport of Nacala,
near the Moatize mine, to the coal
terminal in the port of Beira, the
Odebrecht team
of workers
at Pungo
Andongo
agroindustrial
project, in
Angola:
36,000 hectares
of good land
lic buildings and investing heavily
in natural resources, particularly in
mining and oil.
In the infrastructure area, Chinese companies offer a complete
package consisting of the project,
execution, labor and, above all, financing. There is no lack of money.
China’s government had accumulated around US$2 trillion in American treasury bonds alone by the
end of 2009. In Angola alone, the
China Development Bank financed
44
PIB
of the Chinese projects almost the of the Foreign Ministry, a modern
only people seen are Chinese..
construction in a neo-Soviet style,
The Chinese presence is also
stands out as another Chinese projobvious on the other side of the ect in November 10 Avenue
continent, in Maputo, the capital of
Although 56% of the MozamMozambique situated on the beau- bique budget derives from intertiful Indian Ocean coast. In Karl national donations and cooperaMarx Avenue, a large sign in Por- tion agreements, it is regarded as a
tuguese in front of a new building “poor-rich country,” as a Brazilian
under construction says: “High-lev- diplomat in Maputo describes it.
el building project founded on the The country has great mineral refriendship between Mozambique serves and enormous oil potential.
and China”. The new headquarters Petrobras, which drills for oil in An-
LUCIANO ANDRADE
HANDOUT
Brazil´s Foreign
Trade
Minister, Celso
Amorim,
with Embrapa
specialists :
local cerrados
technology for
the savannas
gola in partnership with Sonangol,
is a partner in Mozambique of ENH
(the Mozambique version of Petrobras). It is prospecting for biodiesel
from jatrofa, an oil-bearing plant
which is common in the drought
areas, as well as sugar cane alcohol.
Petrobras has also formed a partnership with the powerful Malaysian oil company, Petronas, and obtained an exploration block for oil
at the mouth of the river Zambezi.
Another Brazilian state com-
continent,” says Arraes. Embrapa,
whose researches were decisive in
expanding agribusiness in Brazil, is
now looking to transform its enormous knowledge and experience
of tropical agriculture to African
lands – particularly the savannas
which highlight another common
point Brazil has with countries in
the region.
The mega project to extract
coal in Moatize will be essential
for the success of Vale´s decision
only deep water port on the East
African coast, a project in which
Camargo Correa has a 50% stake.
Camargo Correa´s biggest project
in Mozambique is the Mphanda
Nkuma dam which will virtually
double the country’s energy capacity when it is inaugurated in 2013.
“Mozambique has a history of
political stability which makes it
attract investments,” says Alexandre Ribeiro, Camargo Correia´s
country director. The company
PIB
45
new Maputo Shopping, Poko Pano
store sells hotly-disputed bikinis
imported from Brazil. In front of it,
a franchise of Boticário sells cosmetics and perfume (the masculine
Blu Floratta brand costs US$ 40 and
the feminine Qasar H brand, US$
45).
Brazilian brands stand out in the
grocery stores and supermarkets Sadia (chicken), Kitano and Yoki
(cereals), Bauducco (cookies and
pastas).
TV Miramar, controlled by the Brazilian Rede Record, is
extremely popular.
All Mozambicans
seem to know that
President Lula gave
Mozambique US$
13.6 million worth
of retroviral drugs,
a crucial relief for a
country in which Aids is endemic.
Six hundred kilometers from
Maputo, in Johannesburg, South
Africa, the best-known Brazilian brand is Marcopolo from Rio
Grande do Sul state. It set up business in South Africa 10 years ago
In Southern Africa,
you’ll be hard
pushed to find a
better positioned
country than
Brazil
THE ERA OF STEEL
VALE INVESTS HEAVILY
IN STEEL COMPANY
THE GIGANTIC COAL mine owned
by Vale in Moatize, Mozambique,
means much more than a rich business opportunity for the company
or a triumph for Brazil in the rush
for mineral resources in Africa.
For Vale, the Moatize operation
represents a historic turnaround
in the company´s history from one
based solely on mining since it was
created as a state-owned concern
in 1942. Vale is now the largest
46
PIB
privately-owned company in Brazil
and the second-largest mining
company in the world: it is the
global leader in iron ore, the second
in nickel and is also an outstanding
producer of manganese, copper,
bauxite, kaolinite, coal, cobalt,
platinum, alumina and aluminum.
Without any fanfare, Vale has
begun to invest in steel production
and is no longer just a supplier of
raw materials to start the manufacturing process of steel products and
compete directly with its largest
client, China – the biggest producer
of steel in the world, with almost
South Africa’s biggest
bus producer,
Marcopolo sold 460
vehicles for Fifa to
use in the World Cup
and now has one bus manufacturing plants and is one of the largest
South African companies. The supply of buses for the World Cup alone
is evidence of the company´s prestige in the country. Further proof
is seen in Marcopolo´s membership
of the South African government´s
consultative committee to set up
the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system. This is aimed at separate bus
routes on roads with special connecting stations for fast entry and
exit like the model used in Curitiba.
The Brazilian presence in South
Africa is not as marked as in An-
gola and Mozambique but it is also
growing. Sadia – now Brasil Foods
– dominates 14% of the chicken
markets. Boticário became known
in South Africa by using beauty
competitions as a marketing tool
and has a chain of franchises with
a number of stores and products developed specially for the local population. Busscar, another bus manufacturer, assembles its vehicles in
the country with parts imported
from Brazil.
The trade flow between Brazil
and South Africa shows that the
500 million tons a year.
Vale is involved in four steel
projects in Brazil, with total investments of US$ 17 billion (including
its partners) and will expand Brazilian steel production by over 50%.
(Brazil currently produces less than
10% of Chinese volume.) The first
Vale plant, which will be ready in
2010 and be called the Complexo
Siderúrgico do Atlântico (CSA), is
located in Rio de Janeiro and has
been set up in partnership with the
German company ThyssenKrupp.
The Vale ships which transport iron
ore to China and normally return
empty will stop at the port of Beira
in northern Mozambique from 2012
to take on coal supplies for the
company´s steel plants in Brazil. The
ore will also be exported to Asia,
the Middle East and Europe. This
change by Vale was taken under
strong support – read pressure
– from President Lula. A minister
involved in the strategic planning by
the president´s office told PIB that
the coal from Moatize would make
Vale´s steel plants highly competitive. “It is as though Vale had a big
reserve of coal at the side of its iron
ore mines,” he said.
sky is the limit. Trade rose from infrastructure reconstruction
US$ 659 million in 2003 to US$ 2.5 projects which not only benefits
billion in 2008, with an average Brazilian exports and companies
annual surplus in Brazil´s favor of but also helps develop the local
US$ 1 billion.
infrastructure.
The BNDES has been a disWhat a difference this is from
creet but decisive protagonist in the foreign policy of some dethe process of making Brazilian cades ago. In 1972, at the height
companies more internationally of Brazil´s military dictatorship,
active and winning new markets, General Emilio Garrastazu Médiparticularly in Latin America and ci, who was then president, visited
Africa. The bank has destined Lisbon and the Portuguese dictaUS$ 1.8 billion to Brazilian proj- tor, Marcelo Caetano, to celebrate
ects and developments in Angola the 150th anniversary of Brazilalone. Luciene Ferreira Machado, ian independence and a so-called
head of the bank´s foreign trade “Afro-Luso-Brazilian” community
department, says this is another – a rhetorical pretext for Brazil to
step in a journey which began 20 support Portugal’s violent colonial
years ago when the BNDES be- policy. Shortly afterwards, Presigan financing exports to markets dent Ernesto Geisel made a notable
converging with Brazil´s foreign turnaround and Brazil became the
policy. “Now during the interna- first country to recognize the indetional expansion phase, the strat- pendence of Angola and Mozamegy is to support companies which bique. It is now difficult to imagine
can become global players.” In the that any other country is doing as
case of Angola and Mozambique, well as Brazil in Luanda, Maputo
Luciene says the bank only helps and the whole of southern Africa.
ALEXANDRE BRAGA
arrived in Angola in 2005 with its
focus on the public infrastructure
and, in the following year, set up in
Mozambique. “Mozambique has an
abundance of natural resources and
offers great potential in terms of
hydroelectric, thermal and renewable energy generation. The market
for this energy extends throughout
southern Africa,” he adds.
The newest big Brazilian player
on the African raw materials market is CSN. Two
months ago, the
company bought
16.3% of Riversdale
from Mozambique,
a mining company
which originates
from Australia in
which the Indian
company Tata Steel
has a large stake.
“Brazil has an enormous capital of sympathy for Africa and is seen as the older brother
which got things right,” says Eduardo Rio Branco, a Brazilian consultant, who has been working for
years in Maputo. Mozambicans are
fans of Brazilian products. In the
HANDOUT/MARCOPOLO
Cover Story
Concrete
complexes
and workshops
to get Vale
coal project up
and running
in Moatize,
Mozambique:
strategic
PIB
47
Interview
José Sergio Gabrielli
de Azevedo
“We are one
of the largest in
the world.”
The CEO of Petrobras discusses the impact of the discovery
of the pre-salt reserves on the company´s new strategies for
the domestic and external markets
N E LY C A I X E TA
ROBERTO ROSA / BANCO DE IMAGENS PETROBRAS
T
48
PIB
he possibilities opened
by the gigantic oil reserves discovered in
the so-called pre-salt
layer off the Brazilian
coast seem at first sight to have
put Petrobras´s international operations on hold. “Obviously an
event of this magnitude has made
us revise our priorities,” says José
Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo, the
CEO of the company. “Production
in Brazil is now becoming twice
as important.” However, the priority given to the domestic front
does not mean the company will
be backtracking on the advances
it has made on the international
market. These will continue to focus on exploration and production
of oil in deep waters as they have
always done. The new policy will
freeze its foreign investments at
the still high level of around US$
15 billion to 2013.
Gabrielli, 60, has a longstanding
link to the Workers Party (PT) of
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
and speaks enthusiastically of the
progress Petrobras has made in the
International
investment
in the new
2010-14 plan
will be frozen
at R$15 billion
international arena. “We are now
the biggest company in the world in
exploration and production activities in deep waters,” he says, always
referring to the company under his
command in the third person plural. “In terms of market capitalization, we are the second-largest
oil company in the world with the
highest volume of shares traded on
the New York Stock Exchange of all
foreign companies.”
Gabrielli graduated in economics from the Federal University of
Bahia and has a doctorate from
Boston University. He was the
only Latin American executive included in a list of the 30 most respected CEOs in the world which
appeared in a magazine published
PIB
49
Interview • José Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo
by The Wall Street Journal. The executives were chosen for keeping
their companies unscathed by the
global crisis and taking advantage
of the period to expand business. At
the beginning of April, Gabrielli received PIB magazine at Petrobras´s
head office in Rio de Janeiro for the
following interview which covers a
wide range of questions including
the global status of the company,
its growing presence in Africa and
the geopolitical implications of the
pre-salt reserves.
How is Petrobras´s international expansion going now that the pre-salt
program will be demanding great
attention and resources on the domestic market? Will there be any
changes?
We have kept our investment of
around US$ 15 billion for international expansion in our strategic
plan for the 2009-2013 period. This
is because the resources we have to
invest in Brazil in the areas of refining, transport and logistics, gas
and energy and biofuels account for
around 90% of our total investment.
The remaining 10% will be invested abroad as we have to keep up
our international operations in 28
countries. Our operations abroad
are strongly directed at exploration
and production. In South America,
we are increasing our activities in
the areas of distribution and refining as well as being present in the
gas segment. However, we will be
maintaining international investment at a much lower level than domestic investments but we will not
be reducing it. International investment in the new plan for 2010-2014
will be frozen at the same amounts
as before.
50
PIB
But is this not a step backwards for
a company with ambitions to be one
of the largest oil companies in the
world?
This does not mean we are not active internationally. We are present
abroad as the biggest company in
the world in exploration and production in deep waters. We have
22% of the world´s deep water
production whereas the secondlargest producer, Exxon, has 14%.
We have 46 of the 252 floating production rigs in the world whereas
the second-placed company in this
category has 15. In terms of mar-
By 2020,
we plan to
boost Brazil´s oil
output from
1.8 to 3.9 million
barrels/day
ket capitalization, Petrobras is the
second-largest oil company in the
world. We are the international
company with the highest volume
of shares traded on the New York
Stock Exchange among all foreign
companies. In 2009 alone, we raised
US$ 32 billion on the international
market. In terms of production reserves, Petrobras is the fourth largest and seventh in terms of refining. As for production, it must be in
eighth or ninth position. Therefore,
Petrobras is one of he biggest oil
companies in the world.
How does the company intend prioritizing its operations abroad from
now on?
You cannot be everywhere in the
world as you do not find oil in deep
waters everywhere. However, we
are extremely well positioned in
the main exploration areas in deep
waters in the Gulf of Mexico, the
United States, where we have over
200 exploratory blocks, and also
off the west coast of Africa – in Angola, Namibia, Nigeria and Senegal.
We are not present in the North Sea
or the Arctic. We are present wherever there is oil in deep waters.
Petrobras has entered the fuel distribution business in Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile and Colombia
– buying filling stations, adding value to the product, taking care of the
brand. Can we expect more of this
from Petrobras in the future?
nor recommended. We cannot enter a company which uses slavelike labor or which is competing
with food production. There is a
series of restrictions we have to
take into account in our research.
Not necessarily. Our international
activities today are highly concentrated on exploration and production. We are not a retail company.
But is this research not taking up too
much time?
How much do the international activities contribute to Petrobras´s oil
production?
Not necessarily. Oil is an international commodity and we do not
expect to have any problems placing our products abroad. There is
a great need for new production to
meet the future demand. Current
demand is around 85 million barrels a day. By 2020 it will be necessary to add new areas or a find a
new kind of fuel as demand should
rise to between 35 million and 65
million barrels a day. Therefore,
world demand will rise but supply
will not. Oil production is falling
by 7% to 10% a year. Therefore,
we must find new areas to replace
those that will decline. We need to
increase production by 600,000 to
900,000 barrels a day only to offset
this decline.
They should not account for over
10% in five to 10 years. Our target
for 2020 in Brazil is to be producing 3.9 million barrels a day. We
will boost domestic production by
1.8 million a day to 2020, thereby
increasing oil refining in Brazil by
1.3 million barrels a day. Increasing
refining will give us greater capacity to export by-products, oil and
crude oil. In short, we will produce more and export more. The
signs are that by 2020 we should
be exporting another 500,000 to
600,000 barrels a day net.
Does Petrobras intend increasing its
refineries abroad?
We do not have any plans to buy
refineries abroad at this time. Our
priority is to increase refining in
Brazil. We have four refineries
abroad; two in Argentina, one in
the United States and the other in
Japan, on the island of Okinawa.
These refineries need to be improved operationally but we have
no plans to acquire new ones. Our
priority is to increase refinery activities in Brazil.
But do you intend becoming one with
all this oil that will appear in Brazil?
Leaders from the alcohol industry
claim that Petrobras has not kept its
promises to invest heavily in ethanol
production. How do you respond to
this criticism?
We are studying the acquisition
of 30 to 40 plants. However, there
are environmental, social, legal and
business situations to consider before we can buy them. For example,
we cannot buy a company located
in environmental areas which are
It should be stressed that we probably have the most aggressive investment program in ethanol in
Brazil and we will increase it. The
biggest consumer of fuel ethanol
in the world is Brazil. No other
country in the world has half the
fuel for light vehicles coming from
Pre-salt will make
South Atlantic
region a more
heavyweight
geopolitical
player
sugar cane. We expect the domestic market to consume 2/3rds of alcohol and 1/3rd of gasoline by 2020.
Therefore, it is clear that alcohol
as a fuel is here to stay in Brazil.
We have still not managed to make
the international market grow at
this same speed but, even so, it is
growing fast. Alcohol already represents over 8% of fuel for light
vehicles in the United States. It
is the biggest market in the world
but it uses alcohol extracted from
corn. The United States is the biggest alcohol producer in the world
but its production is bad because
corn alcohol is inefficient. As a result of this, we believe there will
be an increase in the use of alcohol
extracted from sugar cane on the
international market. Petrobras is
preparing itself for this.
The good news of the discovery of
so much oil off the Brazilian coast
could also be a bit worrying. The
main oil-producing regions are usually in conflict and war zones. Is the
southern hemisphere free from this
conflict?
During its 150 years of history,
the oil business has always been
linked to geopolitical issues. Oil
was produced for a long time in
the United States then Russia and
the Middle East and spread to
other places. We are now seeing
new production frontiers around
the world. We have bituminous
sands in Canada, extra heavy oil
in Venezuela, Brazil´s pre-salt
layer, shale gas in the United
States and oil in the Arctic.
Most of today´s oil production occurs in the Middle East which is
embattled, politically and militarily. Obviously the pre-salt reserves
will give the South Atlantic greater
geopolitical importance. However,
what is more important is that this
wealth created by the oil will have
enormous impacts on society. The
more you create mechanisms so
that this great wealth from the
oil is used to benefit society, the
fewer problems you will have. I
believe the bill which is going
through the Brazilian Congress
on the new regulatory model will
have an enormous impact in areas
such as education, health, culture,
technological development, programs to combat poverty etc. The
impact of the pre-salt oil will be
very positive.
PIB
51
Strategy
Here
Tultitlán steel
mill: Gerdau
in Mexico
or
abroad?
EDUARDO SIMÕES/GERDAU
LEONID STRELIAEV/GERDAU
André Gerdau
Johannpeter:
better outlook
for 2010
How the main Brazilian multinationals
are investing in the post-global crisis scenario
CECILIA PIRES
N
ow that the black
clouds of the global
financial crisis seem
to have dissipated, the
main Brazilian companies with an international presence
are resuming their international
expansion plans with different assumptions and priorities. Each sector has its own challenges. Petrobras,
for example, prefers to focus on the
local market due to the importance
52
52
PIB
PIB
of exploring the pre-salt and, at least
over the next three years, it should
freeze its international investments
at the current level. Braskem, however, is preparing a strong entry into
the US market. Embraer, in turn,
strongly hit by the crisis, is trying
to counter the advance of its Russian, Canadian, Japanese and US
competitors, which are threatening
its global leadership in the segment
of mid-size jets.
Each player is seeking the best
path to either revert its losses during
the crisis or to exploit the opportunities to acquire assets abroad – opportunities enhanced by the strong BRL
and the greater intensity with which
the crisis hit the more advanced economies. All these companies, however,
share a challenge: the need to fight
for credit, still a bit scarce, with companies from a rapidly-growing local
market and, then, decide whether to
invest these funds here or abroad.
Since the current robust growth
of the Brazilian economy makes
it much more interesting, from a
strategic standpoint, to invest in
the domestic market, Brazil ends
up absorbing the bulk of the available credit. The BNDES itself, the
main source of funds for exporters
– and which in 2009 alone injected
R$ 137bn to cover the shortage of
credit sparked by the crisis – signals
that, going forward, these abundant
funds should not repeat. The priority now, according to its president
Luciano Coutinho, is to increase investments in the local market.
Sérgio Foldes, head of the international area of the BNDES, reveals,
however, in an interview to PIB that
the government continues investing
in the globalization program of Bra-
zilian companies. Also according to “develop these companies’ competihim, the BNDES is working hard to tiveness and prepare them for the inclassify various business segments ternational market”.
where Brazil is already leader and has
Summing up: despite being betsufficiently strong competitive ad- ter structured and strengthened
vantages to forge global leaderships.
by the solid local capital market,
Foldes reveals that, as well as companies are unable to carry out
the petrochemical and food sectors, all their plans without additional
responsible for the most important sources of financing. For this reamergers in the market recently, the son, on most occasions, they have
areas of ethanol, paper and pulp, nan- to choose whether to invest in the
otechnology, biotechnology, wood, local market or abroad. Below we
textile, leather and footwear are
show the solutions discovered by
considered strategic to the country. some of the main Brazilian multinaBefore promoting the international- tionals to the dilemma that promisization of companies from these sec- es to accompany them in the second
tors, however, Foldes says we have to decade of the 21st century.
PIB
53
Strategy
of the largest suppliers of special
long steels in the world, the company was strongly affected by the
crisis. With an industrial presence
in 14 countries, operating in the
Americas, Europe and in Asia and
capacity of over 20 million tonnes
of steel, Gerdau has already received approval for a R$ 1.5bn loan
to execute its investment plan in
the period 2009-2013. The entire
investment plan, however, will require total investment of US$3.6bn.
In an interview to PIB, CEO
André Gerdau Johannpeter revealed
that the company will invest R$
9.5bn in the period 2010-2014
in order to modernize its industrial facilities and add value to its
products and services. Of this total,
some 80% will be spent on the
company’s Brazilian units. After
suffering a decline in net revenue of
36.7% and a drop in consolidated
Complex and bilateral financing
between the parties, if Petrobras
requires funding in the ambit of the
agreement.
Petrobras admits it will freeze
investments abroad, in order to
concentrate funds in the local
market. The pre-salt is a quasitotal priority. “It’s obvious that the
magnitude of the pre-salt forces us
to review our priorities”, said CEO
José Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo,
in an interview to PIB editor Nely
Caixeta, published in this edition
(see page 48). “With the pre-salt,
production in Brazil acquires even
more importance”, he says.
Total external investments
scheduled to be made by 2013,
however, will be maintained at
a high level of US$15bn. This
amount means, however, that
only 10% of the funds to be
invested by the company in the
period will be channeled to activities in the 28 countries where
Petrobras is present. Also according to Gabrielli, the other 90% of
the company’s investments will
be made in Brazil – in the areas
of exploration, refining, transport
and logistics, gas and energy and,
finally, biofuels.
CAUTION ABROAD
FOCUS ON PRE-SALT
IN TANDEM WITH the new rules
proposed by the government to
explore Brazil’s pre-salt oil reserves,
Petrobras is awaiting Congress approval of an ambitious capitalization
plan of the company. And yet, this
may not be enough. Indeed, Petrobras is already acknowledging the
need for a “plan B”, since it needs to
invest R$ 88bn this year alone to extract oil from the recently-discovered
areas under the continental submarine platform. The exploration of
reserves in increasingly deep waters
requires heavy investments, and
Brazil’s Treasury simply doesn’t have
the funds to finance all this. The pre
-salt, however, waits for no man.
To uncover new financing possibilities, Petrobras signed a strategic
cooperation agreement with China
Petrochemical Cooperation (Sinopec) and China Development Bank
Corporation (CDB). The terms of the
agreement envisage studying cooperation opportunities in the areas of
exploration and production, refining,
transport and sales, petrochemicals
and fertilizers. In a recent note, the
company admits its plans to assess
future partnerships in managing
the Rio de Janeiro Petrochemical
54
PIB
Oil platform at
Jubarte field
(Espirito Santo):
first to extract
oil from the
pre-salt region
have reduced our working capital,
costs and indebtedness, maintaining a strong cash position during
2009”, he says. “In other words:
despite the impact of the crisis on
our operations, we com pleted 108
years of operations with a profit in
every year”
Net debt, explains Johannpeter,
fell by R$ 8bn in 2009, due to the
payment of debts due in the period
and the early payment of future
obligations, plus FX variation.
In the CEO’s opinion, the future
inspires optimism. “The outlook
signals an improvement in market demand in 2010, although at
different rates depending on the
geographic region”, he says. “This
is why, over the next few years,
Gerdau will continue to mainly
invest in Brazil.”
THE BIG BUYER
AGENCIA PETROBRAS/BRUNO VEIGA
LAST YEAR, GERDAU was one of
the companies to receive BNDES
funds. Leader in the production of
long steels in the Americas and one
sales of 26.8% to 14 million tonnes,
Johannpeter is cautious when
talking of a recovery. “Despite the
impacts of the government programs to stimulate the US economy,
which translated into major sales
growth in the local auto industry,
there are still major pent-up volumes of funds”, he says.
On the long steels segment,
Johannpeter believes that “the
aspect of the programs related to
investments in infrastructure, due
to their nature, demand more time
to materialize and to translate
into steel consumption. Projects to
build high-speed trains, roads and
bridges are starting to gain traction
and should increase spending on infrastructure”. The company’s CEO
added, however, that the company
remains in a solid position. “We
BRASKEM IS CURRENTLY one
of the largest five petrochemical
companies in the world. Its objective, however, is to become the third
largest player. “So far, all of our
international expansion moves were
totally financed by own funds or by
the market”, says Roberto Prisco
Ramos, director of the company’s
international area. Its incorporation
of comp etitor Quattor has made
Braskem the 8th largest plastic resins producer in the world and leader
in the Americas, while its acquisition of the polypropylene assets of
Sunoco consolidates Braskem as the
number one player in the region.
Braskem’s next moves in the US
market could effectively make it one
of the world’s three largest produc-
ers. But, to take these steps, the
company hopes to receive BNDES
financing, since the acquisitions of
Quattor and Sunoco have left it with
a cash position of only R$ 3bn – peanuts when the objective is to contest
assets in the US market.
Braskem already has three
plants in the US, with capacity to
produce 940,000 tonnes per year of
polypropylene. “We are only interested in buying sizable assets, with
access to long-term raw materials
and reliable sources, with modern technology to compete in the
future market”, reveals Prisco. The
problem, he says, is the low number
of plastic resin players in the market.
“This significantly reduces the number of attractive assets”, he says.
PIB
55
Strategy
improvement in the international
scenario before 2011. Rounding
things off, Embraer continues to see
its competitors multiplying. Russian, Japanese, Canadian and US
companies are starting to produce
medium-size aircraft – a segment
where Embraer is leader (with 40%
of the global market).
Despite the problems, Embraer
maintained its international opera-
tions. It concluded the construction of the first of two plants in the
Portuguese city of Évora, which will
produce complex aircraft structures
and components in composite
materials. Work also continues
on the construction of an Embraer
unit in Melbourne (Florida), where
the Phenom 100 and Phenon 300
jets will be built – this project is the
company’s first industrial unit in
North America. According to Forjaz,
the pace of international investment
shouldn’t be slowed down. “We
can’t jeopardize our future”, he says.
Embraer also has a joint venture
with China Aviation Industry Corporation, located in Harbin, north
of the country, in which it has a 51%
stake. The agreement foresees the
production of the ERJ 145 model at
this unit by mid-2011.
lion new common shares, with the
potential to raise around R$ 8.8bn
to buy new assets. To boot, Banco
do Brasil also obtained Federal
Reserve authorization to operate in
the US retail banking segment.
Everything indicates that, with
the purchase of Patagonia, BB has
set the ball rolling for a growing
international expansion, which is
starting to consolidate in South
America, where the bank already
operates in six countries. The idea is
to provide support to the Brazilian
companies with growing operations
abroad. “Today, instead of representations, Brazilian companies
have plants in other countries and
need funding in local currency”,
says Allan Simões Toledo, vicepresident of international business
and wholesale operations. “In
Argentina alone there are over 200
Brazilian companies producing at
full steam”,
Authorization to operate in
the US enables Banco do Brasil to
achieve another of its targets – expanding its customer service to clients in the US – home to the biggest
community of Brazilian expatriates
(with 1.4 million people). The bank
only has two branches in the
US, in New York and Miami;
but plans to increase its US
presence via acquisitions,
without losing sight, according to Toledo, of its main focus: Brazilian multinationals.
Banco do Brasil exploited
the good momentum to
expand frontiers. It is now
present in 23 countries, with
44 branches or offices. “I
can’t recall having witnessed
such a favorable moment,
with structured companies,
a strong BRL and so many
business opportunities”, says
Toledo. “This is Brazil’s best
ever moment”.
OFF TO A GOOD START
The strategy of Banco do Brasil,
currently Brazil’s largest export
loan bank, is to increasingly become
a financing institution of Brazilian
companies – locally and abroad.
Brazil’s most internationalized
financial institution, Banco do Brasil
has now set its mind on becoming a multinational. In the space
of just a few days, it acquired a
51% controlling stake in Banco da
Patagonia (based in Buenos Aires),
and announced the issue of 286 mil-
56
PIB
EMBRAER
Embraer
Phenom 300:
plant in the US
EVERYTHING
RUNNING
SMOOTHLY
INITIATED IN THE 1990s, the
internationalization process of Marcopolo, a Rio Grande do Sul producer
of buses, involved exporting unassembled kits from Brazil. With the
crisis, production was reorganized,
with the nationalization of parts and
components in the countries where
it operates. Also, the Portuguese
(Coimbra) and Russian plants were
deactivated. Marcopolo ended 2009
with 11 plants, seven of which abroad.
These measures enabled Marcopolo
to emerge from the crisis relatively
unscathed, with its units protected by
the fact that its costs and revenues
are in the same currency. “Brazil has
conditions to boost its participation
in international trade, provided it can
overcome the obstacles currently
preventing it from striking new deals”,
says José Rubens de La Rosa, directorgeneral of Marcopolo. “The depreciated BRL traditionally provided a
boost to Brazilian exports. Now, with
the appreciation of the BRL, Brazil
has lost competitiveness, raising the
debate on what its true vocation really is: a commodities exporter or to
develop a serious policy for exporting
higher value-added products?”
Jorge Stuart
Milne, from
Patagonia, and
Aldemir Bendine,
from Banco do
Brasil: with its
acquisition in
Argentina, BB
kicks off
its international
expansion process
HANDOUT
LAST YEAR, THE crisis caused global orders of commercial jets to slump
to 656, 64% lower than in 2008 and
the lowest sales volume since 2002
– when the global market recorded
333 orders (according to Flight Global,
a specialized sector publication).
Embraer didn’t escape the turmoil.
Its order backlog slumped from 426
commercial jets in the fourth quarter
of 2008 to 265 in December.
The company reacted by laying
off 4,200 workers and drastically
cutting back on its investments.
“Our exports fell 20%” says vicepresident Horácio Forjaz. “We had
to restructure the company in all
directions”. If the forecasts of airline
sector specialists prove correct,
there is no outlook for a significant
HANDOUT
END OF
TURBULENCE?
Marcopolo
in India:
getting
round the
problem of
the strong
BRL
PIB
57
Acquisitions
Freescale buggy
concept: Qiao Xing
has got its eyes
on US microchip
producer
Emerging markets
go shopping
HANDOUT/FREESCALE
One man´s crisis is another man´s bonanza. Companies
from developing countries are exploiting the fragile
economic state of developed nations in order to buy
multinationals and extend their international reach
BRUNO REIS
I
n June 2009, the Chinese
oil group Sinopec acquired
control of the Canadian
company Addax Petroleum
for US$8.8bn. In the same
year, India´s CL Technologie forked
out US$20.8mn to buy Control Point
Solutions, an IT company in the US.
This year, the acquisition of the
US company Sunoco by Brazilian
petrochemical giant Brasken and
Votorantim´s purchase of a stake in
Portuguese cement producer Cimpor add to these other unmistakable
examples of a new phase of corporate internationalization.
In reality, all these major moves
have something in common: they
were led by the main emerging
markets at the height of the international financial crisis. These acquisitions, in such a volatile environment, indicate that, at least for
these rapidly-developing countries,
the crisis also brought positive results – at least for those harboring
international expansion plans and
who successfully exploited this period of international turbulence.
The opportunity to obtain economic gains in adverse situations
is a deeply-rooted feature of capitalism itself. Referring precisely to
58
PIB
this premise, in a speech given in
the state of Indiana back in 1959,
then-president John F. Kennedy
said: “When written in Chinese, the
word crisis is formed by two symbols: one represents danger; the
other, opportunity”. This was interpreted as meaning that, in a crisis,
one should heed danger; but, more
importantly, exploit the opportunities. The phrase became famous,
although linguists still debate the
pertinence of translating Chinese ideograms to Western
languages. At any rate,
Kennedy´s phrase,
which has since been
used by countless
businessmen and political leaders from
the Western world,
is still very relevant
in today´s economic scene.
Relatively unscathed from the
crisis, emerging markets, instead of
going on the defensive and adopting a risk-averse stance (as they did
on countless occasions in recent
decades when the going got tough)
seem to have envisaged the opportunities created by the current financial crisis. Blessed with major
reserves, resulting from their massive trade surpluses in recent years
(and a clear strategic vision for the
internationalization of their companies), these countries seem to regard
the international crisis as a major
opportunity to expand their strategic interests and the global reach of
their companies.
This expansion seems to be
based on two main principles. The
first is the clear strategy of developing nations, especially
China, to reduce their
dependence on traditional investments in
the greenback and
US T-Bills. The second refers to the opportunities created
in the international
scenario by the crisis,
which has enabled
companies from developing nations
to find “bargain buys” abroad – or,
in other words, which has enabled
companies from developing nations,
now with cash at hand, to go hunting for companies with key technologies and/or sectors considered
strategic to their countries.
In terms of the strategy adopted by emerging nations in invest-
Companies from
China and
India are on
the lookout
for bargain
buys abroad
ing their reserves, it is important to
consider the US dollar´s weakness
(with everything indicating the
greenback should remain weak for
some time to come) and the structural problems of the US economy
– causing traditional investments to
become less attractive and safe than
they used to be. This situation has
led developing nations to seek other
forms of investing their reserves.
This new investment strategy
is clear and is called diversification. In its essence, it means that,
instead of accumulating short- and
medium-term currency flows and
financial assets, emerging markets
have started investing in real (longterm) corporate assets, especially in
sectors deemed strategic, such as
natural resources (mining, energy
and food), and sectors at the cutting
edge of technology.
Economic history shows us that
converting opportunities into real
achievements is very rare in the
international economy – and it is
precisely this exceptional situation that seems to be currently facing emerging markets. With today´s
emerging markets now boasting
strong and structured multinationals, governments´ abundant finan-
cial volumes to support them and
aggressive globalization strategies
in a context of asset depreciation,
perhaps it wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that we are at the
start of a paradigmatic change in
the breadth, scope and quality of
emerging markets´ corporate internationalization process.
The international expansion
process of these companies, which
tentatively got underway in the
1990s, has enjoyed a
boom period in the
first decade of the
21st century – a period featuring the purchase of traditional
companies by emerging market groups.
There are plenty of
examples. The purchase of Brazil´s very
own Arcelor by the Indian company
Mittal; the acquisition of IBM´s PC
division by Chinese company LeNovo, or the acquisition of Inco by Brazilian iron ore giant Vale.
What the current environment
seems to be suggesting is that we
are facing a new dynamic, whereby
companies from developing nations
now have the opportunity to make
significant technological progress
in their products and services, add
value to their product offerings and,
mainly, to acquire companies from
key sectors in tomorrow´s world
(e.g. sectors supplying raw materials, oil and state-of-the-art technologies linked to innovation).
The main new development
here is that, perhaps for the first
time ever, the opportunity to make
a qualitative leap by acquiring key
companies is now in
the hands of emerging markets. The international economic recovery, albeit
slow, indicates this
situation shouldn’t
last. Countries such
as China and India
have taken the lead
in this race, envisaging the possibilities and internationalization of their companies as
State strategy. It is now up to the
other countries and companies to
also take the measures needed to
transform these companies into
real global players – and, mainly, in
a number compatible with the increased importance of these countries in the international economy.
Emerging market
multinationals
are enjoying
a rare moment
in economic
history
PIB
59
Market
Factories
are
Vale train
carrying
ores: record
exports to
China in 2009
contributed
to commodity
boom
Brazil is starting
to export more
basic products in relation
to manufactured goods –
and this has lit a warning
sign in the economy
and in the day-to-day
operations of industries
ANDRÉ A ANTONACCI E
W. F. PA D O VA N I
60
PIB
A
major change has taken place on the Brazilian export scene – the
country is now exporting even more basic
and semi-manufactured products
(commodities) in relation to industrialized goods. Five years ago,
Brazil exported US$118.5bn, with
29.3% represented by basic products. It now exports US$153bn, and
40.5% comes from sales of basic
products – between 2008 and 2009,
AGENCIA VALE
losing
exports of manufactured products
fell 27.3%. For many people, this
isn’t good news. For others, it isn’t
that bad. Those in the first group
claim that commodity prices are
more volatile than industrialized
products, and that a sharper swing
in market prices could leave Brazil
in bad shape. Prices of industrialized products, on the other hand,
are more stable. More importantly,
industrial producers can, at least in
part, dictate their price, while com-
market share
modity exporters have no control
over prices and are subject to global
market swings.
“Brazil is forgetting to do its
vital homework: it isn’t advisable
to reduce the share of industrialized products in a country´s trade
balance, since these products (besides more stable prices) have
high added value”, explains Celso
Grisi, an economist from São Paulo
University´s Economics and Business Management Faculty and an
expert on foreign trade matters. – a period, albeit aggravated by the
For added value, read gains result- strong share of commodities, when
ing from the elements of ´elabora- exports fell across the board. Barral
tion´ and ´innovation´ incorporated argues that demand for basic prodinto the products of a developed and ucts is more stable than demand
diversified industrial complex – and for manufactured goods, which is
everything this represents in terms why demand levels, even in recesof science, technology and educa- sions, don’t fall as much as they
tion. In the view of Welber Barral, do for industrialized goods. “The
foreign trade secretary at Brazil´s Brazilian government appreciates
Ministry of Development, exports the importance of not just boosting
of basic products were fundamental exports of industrialized products
to Brazil in a crisis year such as 2009 but also increasing the technologiPIB
61
cal intensity of our exports”, says fers from high infrastructure costs
Barral. “But Brazil is a very com- and taxation, which reduces their
petitive commodity exporter and if competitiveness”, Agnelli told us.
it weren’t for sales of basic products, “Brazil has to cut production costs,
Brazil would have suffered a much improving its infrastructure. And it
stronger export slump in 2009.”
has to reduce taxes throughout the
Among those who, like Barral, production chain of raw materials
see no wrong in itself in commodity used to make manufactured items,
growth is also one of Brazil´s main such as energy, labor, transport,
exporters: Roger Agnelli, CEO of ports and fuel.” A specter looms
Vale – the world´s second largest over this debate – China, recently
mining company and Brazil´s big- raised to the lofty pedestal of global
gest private-sector company. Let´s
economic leader, alongside the US.
not forget, Vale itself works with With the world´s biggest population
basic products. It is the largest (1.3 billion people - a fifth of the
producer of iron ore in the world global population), and territory of
and the second largest nickel pro- almost 10 million km2, the second
ducer. It also produces manganese, biggest in the world, China has bet
copper and bauxite, among other all its chips on a major educational
ores. “Some people play down the revolution to become the world´s
importance of primary products biggest production factory, makin exports, but they
ing everything from
help drive growth in
bags, sneakers and
Brazil´s trade balance
lighters to electronic
and improvements in
products – wherever
a sector where Brayou are you´ll be hard
zil is now a qualified
pushed not to bump
player after investing
into a Made-in-Chiheavily in technology
na label. This monuand research”, says
mental productive
Agnelli. He also armachine needs, and
gues in favor of the
boy does it need,
search for added value. “What we primary products. And Brazil has
should be doing is discussing how jumped in with all guns blazing to
to make Brazil more competitive meet this Chinese demand. Accordin other segments, repeating the ing to Brazilian federal government
achievements of the primary sector.” numbers, over 90% of the products
Agnelli gives the recipe to make ex- Brazil exports to China are comports of primary goods even more modities. In the list of the top ten
profitable. “In Brazil, the process items in 2009, only aircraft, which
of producing raw materials suf- rank 8th, are industrialized. In the
China is
taking
countries
like Brazil
to the
cleaners
62
PIB
Agricultural
products
and ores:
substituting
manufactured
items in the
list of Brazilian
exports
opinion of Grisi, China is a partner
currently placing great stock in Brazilian commodities. But since it is a
colossal buying market, it also has
the power to change this scenario
with the flick of a switch. All it needs
to do is swap its allegiance for other
suppliers. “And then, whatever was
working for Brazil soon won´t be”,
he warns.
China´s competitive foreign
trade policy and the new commodity math are very real questions to
companies such as Cerâmica Eliane,
Brazil´s largest exporter in the porcelain and coverings sector. Based in
Santa Catarina and with seven factories spread out between the state
and Bahia, the company exports
to 86 countries on five continents.
Export manager Márcio Muller,
who lives in Dallas in the US – says
China and Brazil are respectively
the #1 and #2 global producers
and consumers of ceramic coatings.
AGENCIA VALE
RODRIGO LEAL/APPA
TADEU FESSEL/ COPERSUCAR
Market
“The Chinese product is very pricecompetitive globally and in Brazil,
despite all the transport costs and
taxes”, he says. The competitiveness of the Chinese product largely
stems from the fact that the Yen and
the FX rate are controlled by the
government as a way of keeping its
products price-competitive in the
international market. “As a result,
China can export to the US products
up to 30% cheaper than those made
by Eliane”, he points out.
This is a perfect portrait of the
Chinese way of doing business. China ends up playing countries such
as Brazil for a chump. While, on the
one hand, it encourages production
of commodities by its trade partners,
who put their industrialized products on the backburner to meet the
demands of this giant client, China
then uses the same commodities as
raw materials to make industrialized products. Currently, Chinese
industrialized products represent process aided by Brazil´s initiatives
92% of its exports and they are gain- to forge ties with President Hu Jining new markets at an alarming rate. tao and Prime-Minister Wen Jiabao.
And you can say that again!! In ´In return´, China has invaded the
relation to Brazil, what had seemed Brazilian domestic market – acinevitable in recent years (and espe- cording to statistics of Brazil´s Mincially in 2009) ended up happening. istry of Development, the number
China overtook the US in trade re- of Brazilian companies importing
lations with Brazil and is now our from China has tripled in the last
main partner. Trade flows (Brazil- five years, from 73 to 226 in the
China exports + imports) rose from US$10-50mn bracket.
US$35.8bn in 2008 to US$36.1bn in
The Chinese economic tsunami
2009, while the Brazil-US number has also invaded key markets for
stayed at US$35.9bn. Now, with the Brazilian exporters. Brazil was the
guerrilla warfare of subsidies de- main exporter to Argentina, but it
clared by Brazil on US agricultural has been losing market share to Chiproducts (or the cotton cause)???, nese products – in 2003, it used to
we need to wait to see what will sell almost 9x what it sold in 2009.
happen. In 2009, Brazilian exports Even in the footwear sector, where
to China totaled US$20.2bn while Brazil has historically reigned suimports stood at US$15.9bn (ver- preme, China has taken over. Besus US$15.74bn
tween 2007 and
and US$20.18bn,
2009, Brazil lost
respectively, in the
12% market share
US case).
in Argentina while
Brazilian exChina grew 14%. In
ports to China have
global terms, a surbeen growing since
vey taken in 2009
2000, when China
by the IES (Sector
ranked a mere 12th.
Economic InvesThe stronger ties
tigations) consulbetween Brazil and
tancy firm shows
China are a result of the recent, and that everyone lost out in the crisis
still not fully contained, global cri- – but that Brazilian industries sufsis. The crisis hit the US economy fered more than the Chinese. Comparticularly hard, and Peking was paring data for the first 8 months of
quick to exploit this (see article on 2008 with the same period of 2009,
page Xx). The very growth of the Brazil´s global exports fell 44.6% in
Chinese economy and the stronger value and 46.6% in volume terms,
offer of Brazilian products have whereas China suffered correspondalso helped strengthen relations, a ing declines of 18.3% and 30.1%.
Embraer
exports
components
for final stage of
aircraft assembly
in China
PIB
63
Market
Cars for export
and Embraer
aircraft in
China: going
against the
grain
Grisi calls attention to other
possible problems of an export
stance that depends heavily on the
Chinese market. He says there are
doubts on the sustainability of the
current policy of tax and financial incentives adopted by China
in its economic recovery package,
According to Grisi, the main risk
stems from loans which, aggressively granted by State banks, could
incorporate some sort of socioeconomic deterioration. “In this case,
given the high volume of loans,
default rates could require corrective measures that would lead
China to post lower GDP growth
EMBRAER
RODRIGO LEAL/APPA
HANDOUT
Castro, from
AEB: you can´t
just export
commodities
rates”, he warns. In his view, the
Chinese economy is so big that any
slowdown, albeit moderate, would
have major impacts on the global
market, especially on commodity
prices. "For Brazil, this would be a
very negative shock”, he concludes.
In a distant reality from that
lived by an industry such as Cerâmica Eliane, which is feeling the impacts of Brazil´s reduced competitiveness in the face of the Chinese
hurricane, Vale increased its iron
ore supply to China 53.6% last year,
exporting a record 140.4 million
tons to China in 2009. As one of the
industrialized companies unblem-
STRATEGIC MAP OF THE WORLD
BRAZIL´S ECONOMIC POSITIONING IN THE
FACE OF AN INCREASINGLY GLOBALIZED WORLD
SINCE 2004, THE Lula government has invested in trade relations
with China. This process of forging ties has even yielded capital
injections such as the US$10bn
loan by China Development Bank to
Petrobras, to be repaid in 10 years.
In return, Petrobras signed an
agreement to export 150k barrels/
day in the first of these 10 years and
64
PIB
200k barrels/day in the following
9 years. China also opened up its
market to meat and chicken imports. “It is important to recognize
the involvement of our diplomatic
teams, mainly from the embassy,
who enabled new markets to be
opened. The Brazilian government
did its part”, says Rodrigo do Val
Ferreira, a lawyer at the Felsberg e
ished by the crisis, Embraer signed
a partnership with a Chinese aeronautical industry, exporting components to supply the end production
line in China. And to boot it raised
a US$2.2bn loan from the Chinese
credit company CDB Leasing to finance aircraft construction over the
next three years.
But companies like Eliane and
Embraer are swimming against the
tide. Brazil´s commodity roots date
way back, and what´s more…they´re
geographical. With such an abundance of natural resources, Brazil
was born to be one of the world´s
largest suppliers of primary prod-
ucts – in addition to ores, let´s not
forget soybeans and the still huge
unfulfilled potential of sugarcane.
Oil production expectations related to the much-vaunted pre-salt
region are also an ace in the pack.
But just because Brazil is abundant
in natural resources shouldn’t make
it just a commodities exporter, warn
specialists such as José Augusto de
Castro, vice-president of AEB (Brazilian Foreign Trade Association).
“Exporting commodities is a merit"
he says. "But since Brazil has vast
land with abundant resources and
high agricultural productivity, it
needs to use this to leverage other
sectors”. Castro cites China itself
as an example to follow, precisely
because most of its exports are of
industrialized products. With Brazil
not doing its homework, the numbers reveal deterioration in the
country´s terms of trade. ApexBrasil
(Brazilian Pro-Export and Investment Agency) data reveal that the
average price of Brazilian products
exported to China fell 9.4% between
H1 2009 to H1 2010. And while
Brazilian products are generally
cheaper for buyers, China hiked the
prices of its exports to Brazil at the
start of 2007. Chinese non-durables
rose from US$6.33/kg, in the period
Jan-July 2008 to US$7.44 in the first
seven months of 2009. In the same
comparison base, durables leapt
from US$4.46 to 4.60. “This is surprising due to the global economic
crisis and the consumption slump”,
notes Grisi, who says this price
trend seems to be consolidating for
two reasons – the evolution of the
Chinese industry, which has been
able to make higher-value added
products, and the higher costs triggered by the Chinese government´s
changes to the country´s labor and
tax laws. China truly is selling more
at higher costs – i.e., it´s increasingly
assuming its true status.
Associados law firm in China, which
provides consultancy services to
Brazilian companies. “If we want to
add to the list of new, higher added
value export products, the market
is open and trade relations couldn’t
be better”,
But while trade relations in
the East are expanding, there are
signs of smoke above the Equator.
Brazil is losing its competitiveness with the US. “Since the start
of the Obama government, there
have been no trade missions with
the US, causing a slight diplomatic
distancing”, says José Augusto
de Castro, vice-president of AEB.
The result was growth of only
1.5% in Brazilian exports to the
US between 2002 and 2009. It´s
the game of international negotiations, where the playing field and
rules are constantly changing. Part
of this strategy of shifting away
from the crisis in the US was also
triggered by the emergence of new
emerging markets, including India,
Saudi Arabia, Russia and Turkey.
The attempt to prospect international markets outside the US-Europe axis is gaining traction thanks
to the recent crisis in European
countries such as Portugal, Ireland,
Italy, Greece and Spain.
However, many specialists
believe the initiative of maintaining
the focus on new markets shouldn’t
see traditional clients being underserved. According to Castro, Brazil´s
trade distancing from the US is worrying since the US are the world´s
biggest importers (the only country
to import over US$2trn), plus major
buyers of manufactured items.
While Brazil is focused on China,
other pieces in this international
game of chess are moving over to
the most traditional opportunities.
Some countries from South America
are already looking to make strong,
advantageous moves by signing
bilateral trade agreements and
opening up new business fronts.
Colombia, Peru, Equator and Mexico
are growing their US market share,
filling the void left by Brazil.
PIB
65
Acquisitions
Going from
Strength to
Strength
R U B E N Y G O U L A R T, R I O D E J A N E I R O
O
ver the past few years,
the Ibope Group, a
Brazilian multinational specialized in
media, market and
opinion research, and present in 16
countries (the Brazilian Institute of
Public Opinion and Statistics), appears to have virtually ignored the
inroads being made by its global
competitors in its own territory. After seeing mergers finalized in Brazil with European and Asian groups,
associations with the American firm,
Nielsen, the French company; Ipsos
and the English Synovate, Ibope
strengthened its own operations
in South America, and particularly
Brazil. In January of this year, Ibope
also went swiftly on the counter attack in the U.S. After consolidating
its expansion in the Latin-American
market, the company acquired control of Zogby International, one of
the most traditional research institutes in the United States, based in
Utica, in the State of New York.
66
PIB
HANDOUT
The Ibope Group reacts to investments made
by multinationals in the sector in Brazil,
by acquiring one of the most traditional
American market survey institutes
Marangoni,
from Ibope
Inteligência:
“Our clients
demand an
integrated
network of
services”
With this move, Ibope has be- the area of public opinion polls, and
come the sixth largest Brazilian political and market research.
company in terms of foreign asThe first steps in Ibope’s intersets, behind the sector giants like nationalization were taken in 2008,
Petrobras, Vale and Gerdau. The with its association with Worldwide
acquisition of Zogby was a bold Independent Network of Market
move in the Brazilian research in- Research (WIN), an entity that comstitute’s internationalization plan, prises of 30 companies around the
and which perplexed many regional world, and which aims to stimulate
research market analysts. With af- business in the sector. After plantfiliate companies in Argentina and ing its banner on the world map in
Mexico, offices in Chile and Porto terms of research, Ibope began to
Rico, and Just about to inaugurate a study opportunities in the United
unit in Colombia, it was only natu- States, even reaching the point of
ral that the company prioritized sounding out certain companies.
the expansion already underway in At the end of last year, the English
Latin America. However, with in- Group, WPP, one of the major playcreasingly globalized and integrated ers in the global marketing sector,
transactions in the segment, Ibope acted as an intermediary in the start
is now looking at a truly intercon- of talks with Zogby International.
tinental scope of operations. “Our “We talked and closed the deal, as
clients, most of whom are global we believe that Zogby’s profile complayers themselves, require an in- bines perfectly with ours, and that
ternational and integrated network there is an abundance of cultural
of services”, explains psychologist, identity”, explained Marangoni.
Nelsom Marangoni, CEO of Ibope
And there were undoubtedly
Inteligência, the group’s division in plenty of similarities between the
two companies, particularly in the
area of methodology and their focus on market research, the business segment that is growing the
fastest around the world. There is
also common ground in that, rather
like the Brazilian institute, Zogby
is popular, has a good reputation
with the press and considerable
credibility among American universities. Its chief executive, John
Zogby, is a well-known figure in the
media, as well as being a researcher,
writer, television commentator and
contributor to magazines and newspapers with huge circulations in the
United States. “Zogby and Ibope
easily identify with each other, as
they do virtually the same thing”,
stated Marangoni.
More than representing simply
finding its other half, the acquisition gave Ibope the access code to
the largest research market in the
world. Despite its popularity, Zogby
does not have a significant market
share in the American research segment. With offices in Washington
D.C. and Miami, and an annual revenue of US$70 million, the institute
accounts for less than 1% of the estimated U$S8.8 billion research market in the U.S., equivalent to 27% of
the US$32.4 billion global market.
It is also true to say that the American market’s position in the segment is still fragile, as it shed 2.1%
in terms of market share in 2008, as
a direct result of the international
financial crisis.
However, Zogby’s business portfolio has other built-in attractions,
of particular note is the fact that the
institute (founded by John Zogby in
1984) has a presence in 74 countries
and 20% of its business is allocated
in the Middle East, a region with
huge growth potential. With the
American and European markets
literally saturated, the research
market is now expanding in other
locations around the globe, and Brazil is at the forefront of this expansion. “As of now, after consolidating
our operations in our local markets
and expanding them into the Asian
market, the large research corporations are turning to Latin America”,
explained Waldyr Pilli, president
of the Brazilian Association of Research Companies (ABEP).
The appetite of multinationals
in the region is easy enough to understand, as the demand for market
research has grown the most here
in the past few years. With more
open and democratic governments,
the region has been a rich source
of business for companies in the
sector, so much so that in 2008,
growth in the Latin American segment reached 5.6% compared with
the global average of 0.4%. Ibope
has 14.7% of this market, which
registered a total annual revenue of
US$1.7 billion in 2008.
Compared with the rest of the
world, the Latin American market
is still modest in terms of its size,
less than in England, France and
Germany, but approximately the
same size as in Japan and represents a third of total sales when
combined with the Middle East and
PIB
67
Acquisitions
Africa. Nevertheless, as the region business in a market with a com- any local differences will be rehas such enormous growth poten- pletely new set of dynamics. Proj- spected”, emphasizes Marangoni.
tial, one can only imagine that the
ects have been diversified, increased “But a research agency nowadays
acquisition of assets in more distant in terms of scale and costs have been has to be at least regional, as are
markets will not stop Ibope from reduced. The increase in access to many of our projects”.
following its main expansion in digital technologies has also altered
The logic of integrating operaLatin America. The company’s stra- the way of doing research, as most tions to take advantage of the assotegic plan includes the opening of business is now done using the In- ciated synergies involved, includa new unit in Colombia in the near ternet and telephone. But the most ing on an intercontinental stage,
term. “The distribution of business
significant changes
will soon be applied
will likely be through regional units, can be seen in the cliin the recently-acin which the stronger markets will ents. “The qualitative
quired American
cover the smaller neighbors”, add- expectations associinstitute. In prined Marangoni.
ated with client reciple, Ibope wants
However, the expansion model quirements are much
to make the most of
outlined by Ibope is more ambitious higher and more foZogby’s experience
than it first appears, as acquisitions cused on strategy”,
in the field of inforof research companies are planned explained Marangoni.
mation gathering,
in any global market where an inter- “Rather than merely
particularly using
esting opportunity arises. Riding the providing information,
the worldwide web,
global wave of consolidation among the research we now offer helps pol- where, as Marangoni recognizes,
the companies in the sector, the Bra- iticians in their campaign strategies, the United States is more advanced.
zilian institute has already ensured and corporations prepare their mar- But, on the flipside of the coin,
that it will not be an acquisition tar- keting approaches, and so on”.
Ibope also intends to use Brazilian
get, and is itself on the acquisition
In addition to this new sce- technology in the company it has
trail for assets in the area as a hunter nario, there has also been a boom acquired, particularly in the areas
and not the hunted. “Europe is cer- in research to support the devel- of consumption and product develtainly in our sights; but perhaps a opment of public administrative opment. Another area where there
little further down the road”, said policies, particularly in England, is a sizeable interface is electoral
Marangoni. Revenue in the research France, Germany and the United research, even though voting is not
segment in the Old World totals States. And it is in this new envi- obligatory in the United States as it
US$16.6 billion, equivalent to 49% ronment that Ibope aims to set up is in Brazil.
of the global market.
a network that offers homogeneous
However, the jewel in the crown
Whichever path is chosen, it is
services and products to its clients, is Zogby’s business portfolio; and
certain that Ibope will expand its anchored in Ibope’s own research the institute’s influence in the
culture and identity, which would American market, more often than
be disseminated among its affili- not linked directly with the charisZogby:
ates from Brazil. “It is logical that matic company founder, John Zogalways in
Ibope has
decided that it
isn´t the hunted
but the hunter
of assets
in the area
HANDOUT
the media to
close major
business
deals with
companies
68
PIB
by, CEO and Chief Insights Officer,
and who will retain these job positions. The same logic, of not adding
to a recipe that is selling well, was
applied when the decision was taken to maintain Zogby’s name in the
United States market, now associated with Ibope, largely as a strategy
to spread the Brazilian name internationally.
Concerned about
not letting the company’s memory and
identity die, a fatal
error committed
during so many incorporations, Ibope
has been setting up
its new team with
extreme care. In
principle, nobody will be laid off,
made easier by the fact that with
a staff of 50 employees working at
its offices in New York, Washington and Miami, Zogby is already a
streamlined operation. The changes
made are likely to be restricted to
hiring a Dutch executive with considerable international experience,
who will report directly to Brazil.
Ibope’s strategy of regionalization in its research does not in any
way preclude growth in Brazil. So
much so that the company recently
acquired control of one of its national competitors, IDS Marketing
Intelligence, an ad hoc, Data Mining operation, with 23 years of ex-
perience, as well as the Institute of
Market Research and Development
(IPDM), a specialist in geo-demographics for shopping centers, the
retail and real estate sectors.
The expansion of Ibope’s business in the domestic market can
also be seen as an answer to the
recent investments made by international competitors.
Nielsen has acquired
assets in Venezuela
and Chile as well as
increasing its presence in Brazil, where
it has been operating
for 40 years. Ipsos,
which in 2001 incorporated Marplan,
acquired Alfacon in
2008, a company based in São Paulo,
specializing in research in the auto
sector. Despite the advances being
made by its competitors, Ibope still
leads the research ranking in Brazil,
followed closely by Nielsen.
Even though growth has been
limited in the past few years, the
Brazilian research industry still felt
the lingering after
effects of the international financial crisis in 2009.
As in many other
activities, the level
of overall business
remained practically unchanged
from 2008, in the region of R$1.5 billion, equivalent to 0.5% of GDP. The
outlook for this year is brighter, as
growth will be spurred by the elections. “In previous years, growth in
this business was higher than GDP,
although we saw this cycle interrupted last year”, explained Pilli, of
ABEP. “The projected growth rate
this year, although atypical, should
be higher again: at between 10% to
15%”, says Marangoni.
The growth at Ibope Inteligência as a result of electoral research
should mean that its revenue contributes to between 25% and 30%
of 2010 revenues, estimated at
R$110 million. But the company’s
core business is market research,
largely for the corporate sector. To
provide the services required in the
diverse segments in which it operates, Ibope has 200 permanent researchers in Brazil and another 100
in Latin America. And this does not
include the army of professionals
hired by specialized cooperatives
and companies that, in 2008, were
responsible for carrying out more
than 600,000 interviews. So it
appears that the
order of the day
for Ibope is to expand as and where
the opportunities
arise, either here
or overseas.
business directly through his media
exposure. Among his main clients are
MSNBC and CNBC, the cable channel
Fox News; and newspapers such as
the New York Post, Houston Chronicle
and Miami Herald
His election analyses are pub-
lished on the opinion pages of the
New York Times, Wall Street Journal
and Financial Times. TV or radio
presenters in the United States refer
to him as “the Prince of researchers”
or “the general of research”. A graduate in History from Le Moyne Col-
lege and Syracuse University, Zogby
has lectured in history and political
science for 24 years and his books
include: The Way We’ll Be: The Zogby
Report on the Transformation of the
American Dream, published in 2008
by Random House.
Purchase
of Zogby is
a reaction to
Nielsen´s and
Ipsos´ moves in the
Brazilian market
THE MEDIA MAN
THE AMERICAN, JOHN Zogby, CEO of Zogby International, is a well-known
figure in the U.S. media. A writer, television commentator and contributor to
magazines and newspapers, he has frequently appeared on the main television networks and on cable-TV programs in both the United States and international. His profile has been published in the main media vehicles, such as
The New Yorker, Fortune Magazine and Inc., and being written about in these
media sources is part of Zogby’s successful strategy to leverage his research
PIB
69
Exports
Made
in Minas
In the space of five years, Minas Gerais tripled
its exports (in terms of value), killing off the
stereotype that they only export landscape J O S É M A R I A F U R TA D O, B E L O H O R I Z O N T E
P
oking fun, in a malicious
but humorous way, some
Minas Gerais citizens
used to say that Minas
Gerais only exported
coffee and countryside. The joke
referred to exports of ores, especially iron ore, the systematic digging of which disfigured many of
the state´s iconic mountains. Two
decades ago, it was common for
cars in Belo Horizonte to carry
stickers with the words: “enjoy the
mountain view”, leaving between
the lines the obvious conclusion:
“before they disappear”.
20 years later, Minas Gerais still
exports landscape, since most of
its export revenues still come from
ores. A lot, however, has changed
in these two decades. Especially
in recent years, the Minas Gerais
economy has been growing above
the export average and its list of exports has diversified strongly. Today,
12.7% of Brazilian exports originate
in Minas, making it the second biggest Brazilian exporter (in terms of
volumes) last year. This evolution
is clear in the statistics (see table 1).
We are talking about a movement,
initiated some time ago, to diversify exports and, in parallel, evolve
from supplying primary products
to other higher value-added items.
Up to 1970, Minas Gerais basically
MINAS GERAIS EXPORTS (USD BILLION)
:: Exports :: Exporters :: Exported products
70
PIB
2008
VAR %
7,4 24,4 229,4%
1 313 1 727
31,5%
2 609 2 858
9,5%
TALENTO JÓIAS - HANDOUT
2003
Jewels:
sales
steady
despite
crisis
PIB
71
MAIN TRADE
PARTNERS
(USD million)
:: China 4 007
:: Germany 2 630
:: US 2 551
:: Argentina 1 633
:: Japan 1 547
:: Holland 1 062
:: Italy 929
EXPORTA MINAS HANDOUT
Exportaminas
service desks:
helping
small- and
medium-size
companies
72
PIB
the history and strong identity of
Minas Gerais from the days of Portuguese colonization. The state exported and continues exporting lots
of gold (US$884 million in 2009)
and precious stones. But the state´s
jewelers are an example of the
changed outlook. Whereas before
they only exported precious stones
in unrefined state, now these same
stones are exported in refined condition. Many become jewels. The
amount we´re talking about here is
still small (US$20 million in 2009),
but sales should rise.
Vancox, from Belo Horizonte, is
one of the Minas Gerais jewelers
to do well on the export front. Recognized by renowned international
publications, Vancox, according to
owner Ricardo Bronfen, exported
around US$3 million in 2009 to
Arab countries, the US, Russia and
Latin America (Vancox jewels cost
from US$1,500 to US$75,000). To
access the export market, the company surrounded itself with distributors located in strategic points.
One of them is in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates. “We conquered
markets and we even excelled in the
eyes of the World Gold Council by
developing new techniques”, says
Bronfen. “Intertwining threads of
very fine precious metals is one of
these techniques.” The Middle East
and the US are also key markets for
another company from Belo Horizonte, Talento Jóias, which 8 years
HELP FOR THE
SMALL AND MEDIUM PLAYERS
MUCH OF THE merit for the
growth in the number of Minas
Gerais export companies and
products, a slow and difficult process, goes to Central Exportaminas, which centered its programs
on helping small and mid-sized
companies – those with the least
resources and knowledge to venture into the export market.
Exportaminas is a publicprivate alliance involving BM&F
Bovespa, the Minas Gerais
ago internationalized its operations.
Its 18-carat gold jewels, handicraft
and other products cost between
US$100 and US$100,000.
This year the company, which
doesn’t have distributors (it sells
its products at international trade
fairs), expects to export US$100,000,
practically the same amount as 2009.
"We won´t grow, but we also won´t
lose ground, which is great given the
Government and entities such as
the Minas Gerais State Industry
Federation (Fiemg). BM&F has
similar partnerships in other states,
but so far the most successful is
Exportaminas. “We´ve been operating for 5 years already. Our achievements are still modest, and there´s
potential for much more”, says
Jorge Duarte de Oliveira, director.
Exportaminas provides safer guidance, step by step, on what companies should do to export. “Via our
programs, we provide all the necessary advisory services to micro and
small companies”, explains Duarte.
One of its most promising programs
is PEIEx (Industrial Export Growth
Much more
than ore:
Fiat cars and
Helibras
helicopters are
now attracting
external
buyers
HELIBRAS - HANDOUT
exported coffee, ores, gold, precious
stones and a few steel products. Today, they export auto parts, vehicles
(Fiat and Mercedes Benz), helicopters (Helibras, located in Itajubá)
and sophisticated biomedical products, such as artificial heart valves
and insulin.
But perhaps a better example
comes from gold and precious
stones – ores that are confused with
FIAT - HANDOUT
Exports
Project, developed by ApexBrasil),
which aims to cater to the needs
of 1,340 companies in 18 months.
None of them are currently exporters, and the plan is to train them
to export. “If we identify 5-10% of
them with export potential, that
alone will be a great achievement”,
says Oliveira. Another program, in
partnership with World Bank, is focused on the Valley of Jaíba, where
the largest irrigation project in the
whole of Brazil was implemented.
From Jaíba, companies can export
lemons (Jaíba has the envious
ability to produce all year round,
something other countries find
very difficult), mangoes and other
fruit. The plan is to put a logistical
system in place to ensure constant
exports. An international tender,
already in final phase, will retain a
consortium specialized in perishable
product logistics and in the international fruit market. In cooperation
with the Brazilian Association of
Industrial Development (ABDI) and
the European Union, Exportaminas is involved in another program
aimed at training 100 food, footwear, metal-mechanic and cosmetics companies to export to the EU.
The companies are already in sales
promotion phase. “Shortly we will
have around 2,000 exporters in
Minas Gerais”, says Oliveira.
PIB
73
Exports
MAIN PRODUCT
GROUPS – 2009
(US$ million)
NOVO NOVARTIS – HANDOUT
crisis in the US market", says Maria
Tereza Géo, director of Talento.
To hang on to its national #2 position and continue to boost export
growth, in 2004 the state government created Central Exportaminas (see text on page x.), which offers aid programs to exporters or
companies looking to start exports,
especially small and medium companies. The results are still modest:
the 100 main export products continue to account for around 90%
of exports. But we are starting to
see results: the 2,758 products that
account for the remaining 10% of
exports already total US$1.5 billion – whereas in 2003, this group
totaled only US$724 million. The
efforts led to growth in the state´s
exporting municipalities. Almost
a third (266) of Minas Gerais´ 853
cities exported some type of product in 2009, 16 more than in 2008.
The income derived from exports,
although seemingly little in absolute values, helps keep these
local economies in good shape.
Minas Gerais
biotechnology:
exporting
medications,
cosmetics and
beauty items
Alvinópolis, in Zona da Mata, is Gerais exports to China – in 10
an example. With around 15,000 years, they rose from US$162 milinhabitants, the city currently has lion to US$4 billion, a whopping
27 export products.
2,373% rise!
Beauty items acThe price paid by
count for 90% of the
the Chinese for the
US$162,000 exportbest chicken feet is
ed in 2009. The mupractically the same
nicipality of Alfredo
paid for chicken
Vasconcelos (also
breasts – a premifrom Zona da Mata),
um cut for Western
with 6,000 inhabtaste buds. And what
itants, exported
about the taste? The
US$62,000 in roses.
Chinese make speÁguas Vermelhas, in
cific, different dishes.
the North, with 13,000 “The process used leaves the bone
inhabitants, exported very crunchy and tasty”, guarantees
US$166,000 in gran- Gustavo Henrique Dias Untar, comite. Other products mercial manager of Pif Paf. In the
are making their mark past, and as determined by Brazil´s
abroad, such as Minas Ministry of Agriculture, chicken
Gerais fashion, fruit, feet went to the rendering plant.
industrialized foods, Now, Pif Paf alone exports some
biotechnological prod- 3,400 tons per year, resulting in
ucts and medical drugs. revenue of US$4.7 million. But this
Some of these items
slaughtering house´s talent to ocmay be slightly bizarre cupy unusual market niches goes
for Brazilian consump- further. The company has prepared
tion standards. Pif Paf, itself to exploit the demand of the
from Belo Horizonte, different customs of other countries.
and a supplier of chick- For example, animal genitalia, also
en feet for Hong Kong highly appreciated by the Chinese.
restaurant tables, will Or rectum - another Chinese delicertainly attest to this. cacy. These are examples capable of
Consumed as a delica- convincing even the biggest skeptic
cy by the Chinese, they that Minas Gerais no longer exports
helped boost Minas just landscape.
:: Iron ore
6 565
:: Coffee and byproducts
2 911
:: Alloys
1 077
:: Unrefined gold
805
:: Vehicles
708
:: Sugar
598
:: Semi-manufactured iron/steel 514
:: Rolled iron/steel products
510
:: Soy
450
:: Pulp
396
74
PIB
Almost
853 cities in
Minas Gerais
State
are now
exporting
How it works
Chaya,
head of the
BrazilianIraqi
Chamber of
Commerce:
ability to
overcome
difficulties
Iraq is back in the market
ANTONIO C ARLOS SANTOMAURO
I
raq is that country invaded
and occupied in 2003 by
ex-US president George W.
Bush, stage of a bloody war
and still a victim of major
violence today. So far, nothing new
there – what´s surprising is that Iraq,
with all this going on, is becoming
an attractive destination for Brazilian products, heavily present in Iraq
in the last two decades of the 20th
century. Brazil currently mainly
sells food to Iraq (especially meat
and sugar), but medications and
cosmetics as well. So what´s it like
doing business there? Some con-
HANDOUT
Brazilian flag
at Bagdad
Trade Fair in
2009: back
in the game
76
PIB
cerns plague potential candidates:
security, transport logistics, and
export market financial and institutional conditions.
In all these aspects, Iraq is definitively still not a conventional
partner. On the question of security,
for example: what are the risks of
a trip to Baghdad, or to the rest of
the country for that matter? At least
the situation in the North and in
the green zone (home to downturn
Baghdad, the government and most
representatives from other countries) has already improved significantly, says Michel Alaby, secretary-
general of the Arab-Brazil Chamber
of Commerce (CCAB). “But outside
these areas, it will be reassuring to
have the services of a personal security company”, he stresses.
The environment is completely
safe at trade fairs and trips by delegations featuring representatives
from various companies, adds Jalal
Chaya, president of the Chamber of
Commerce and Brazil-Iraq Industry
(CCIBI). In the green zone, he says,
visitors can now find internationallevel hotels and 43 banks to wire
funds; of these, five accept Mastercard and Visa. “Credit card usage
remains limited, but some sort of
financial structure is starting to rear
its head”, says Chaya.
While this abnormal state of affairs continues, some peculiarities
benefit exporters. Take, for example, the triangulation operations
with neighboring countries – a formula discovered in the harsh days
of the war years. CCIBI reckons
that around USS470mn in Brazilian products entered Iraq last year
via triangular (or three-way, if you
prefer) operations with distributors
from Jordan, Syria and Kuwait.
That´s almost double the
US$250mn in direct exports in the
same year, according to official Brazilian numbers (135% more than in
2008). This shift in direction hails
from peculiar historical conditions,
explains Chaya. “During the years
of conflict and trade embargoes
placed on Iraq, many Iraqi businessmen set up their business foundations abroad”, he says, which is
why exports officially registered as
going to distributors
from other countries
could actually end up
in Iraq.
This is the case
of Erwin Guth (from
Barueri, São Paulo),
which produces surgical and dental equipment. “We export
to Saudi Arabia, the
UAE and Kuwait, and
we know that from there some of our
products go to Iraq”, says export director Karin Guth, who took part in
a trade fair in Iraq back in 2006.
Rio Grande do Sul group Randon,
which sells Fras-le auto parts, (towage) trailers and other equipment in
Iraq, is in a slightly different situation. Since the main Iraqi port is
still heavily damaged and Randon´s
Iraqi distributor is situated north of
the country, in a region close to the
Turkish port, it ships its products to
Turkey (since it works with a local
distributor, this operation doesn’t
classify as triangulation).
According to Jascivan Carvalho,
Randon´s Middle East operations
manager, shortly after the second
Gulf War business deals with Iraq
slumped. “But five years ago they
started to gradually pick up again,
and are now growing nicely”, adds
Carvalho, who currently works
out of Randon´s Dubai office, from
where he pays regular visits to
Iraq. CCIBI, in partnership with
ApexBrasil (Brazilian Pro-Export/
Investment Agency), has already
helped Brazilian businessmen participate in trade fairs in Iraq, and is
now working on put- accordance with the precepts of
ting together a per- Islamic religion. The Chambers
manent show room and the trade office financed since
of Brazilian products 2009 by the Iraqi government in São
in North Iraq. But a Paulo will give you lists of importpartner in Iraq itself, ers and information on the size and
familiar with the lo- potential of the Iraqi market. But afcal procedures to ter gathering this information, you
bid at local tenders, have to visit the country, stresses
would be great for Jascivan Carvalho, from Randon.
companies looking "Local businessmen want to meet
to supply the Iraqi the people they hope to do business
government, which is now a major with”, he says.
client, points out Alaby. According
“Major companies from all over
to Alaby, the bureaucratic proce- the world are now seeking business
dures required for exporting to Iraq deals in Iraq", adds Chaya. "The
are no different from those needed country has the world´s second largto export to any Arab country, and est oil reserves, 30 million people, it
include certifying documentation imports 98% of its consumption and
at one of the Chambers of Com- it is starting out from scratch”. The
merce. Meat exports also require main risk, here, is of (better preHalal certification, which attests pared) competitors getting in first
that animals were slaughtered in – just like in any business, in fact.
HANDOUT
Doing business with an old partner
still has its tricks, but exports of
`made-in-Brazil´ products are on the rise
Iraq has oil, is
starting out from
scratch and is
attracting
companies
from all over
the world
PIB
77
Globe-Trotter • Executive Travel
Skiing in Portillo:
refined simplicity
MARCO REZENDE
FLYING CARPET
THE MAGICAL MOUNTAIN
skiportillo.com
DIVULGAÇÃO/ SKI PORTILLO
IT’S WHEN THE drop in temperatures threatens to make the São Paulo
air unbreathable (and the end of the semester suggests a pause for rest)
that the appeal of the Chilean ski resort Portillo proves irresistible. Portillo
is not a city, like Bariloche, or a ski resort like Megève (France) or Cortina
d´Ampezzo (Italy). It’s merely an old hotel at the top of the Andes, on the
banks of the carretera linking Santiago to Medonza, in Argentina. But what a
hotel! It’s so refined in its simplicity that it only sells full-board weeks, while
meals (rigorously gastronomical) are à la carte.
Although the hotel rooms don’t have a telephone or television, the
hotel’s massive living room offers an array of entertainment while the bar
serves the best pisco sour in the three Americas. It goes without saying that
Portillo is ski in-ski out. In other words, put on your skis, leave the hotel
and immediately start skiing, on slopes with all levels of difficulty. www.
EUROPE ON THE RAILS
THE EUROPEAN NETWORK
of high-speed trains will
practically double in size
over the next 15 years. But
already, the current network
has done away with the competition from aircraft on most
routes of up to 500-600km.
By train, it takes precisely
2 hours from Brussels to
London and 2h15m from Paris
(Gare du Nord) to the spectacular Saint Pancreas station
in the heart of London.
Organizing train trips is now
much easier following the
Portuguese website launch of
Rail Europe – a consortium of
European train ticket sales.
You can receive your train
ticket at home or pick it up at
the first station visited
(www.raileurope-world.com).
In London, a flat
to call your own
THE COMFORT OF a flat, with
kitchen and everything else to
boot, decorated with good taste
(including nice wine glasses)
and with that fresh smell beats
out the best hotel for long stays,
especially from a cost-benefit
standpoint. In London, the
Cheval Group offers an outstanding collection of good serviced
flats. For upwards of US$1,200
Boeing Qatar
Airways aircraft:
best business class
flights in the world
per week (3-suite flats are much
more expensive), you can stay at
flash addresses such as Knightsbridge (near Harrod´s and Harvey
Nichols), Thorney Court, Hyde
Park and South Kensington. From
the terrace of the 7th floor of the
Gloucester Park flat, you can see
iconic London locations such as
the dome of Saint Paul’s cathedral, Big Ben and the giant London
Eye wheel (www.chevalgroup.com/
Properties.asp).
Flat for rental
in London: from
US$1,200 a week
AFTER THE EMIRATES, Israel’s El Al and Turkish Airlines, all
rookies in Brazil’s skies, another Middle East airline is touching
down in Brazil. On 24 June, Qatar Airways will start flying the
Guarulhos-Doha route, via the Persian Gulf, with Boeing 777s –
offering economy and business classes. In 2009, the company
was voted the world’s best business class airline at the 16th World
Travel Awards in London, the Oscars of the airline sector. The
Doha-São Paulo flight continues on to Buenos Aires. So now, in
addition to TAM, GOL, LAN, Aerolíneas Argentinas and British Airways, travelers will also have the option of flying the GuarulhosBuenos Aires route via Qatar Airways (www.qatarairways.com).
IT’S YOUR CHOICE
The world’s 10 most dangerous cities
CNN CROSSCHECKED DATA obtained by the Foreign Policy and
Forbes magazines, Citizen’s Council for Public Security (a US NGO) and
Mercer Global Investment reports to produce a series on the world’s
most dangerous cities in terms of personal safety. Put on your bulletproof vest if you have business to conduct in any of these cities. Note:
it’s not a ranking and the order is random.
– do we really need to
• Bagdad
explain why?
– Highest number of
• Caracas
homicides per capita in the world’s
large city
– According to the FBI, the
• Detroit
highest annual ratio of violent crimes
•
TO CHEVAL GROUP
High speed
for those who
can afford it
RAIL EUROPE
PIB
São Paulo-Doha direct flights
HOME SWEET HOME
High-speed
European train:
reservations in
Portuguese
78
QATAR AIRWAYS/DIVULGAÇÃO
The discreet charm of Portillo
per 100,000 inhabitants in the US: a
staggering 1,220.
New Orleans – highest ratio of
homicides in the US.
– The capital of Pakistan is
• Karachi
now part of Kabul: terrorist attacks,
kidnappings, male and female
bombers.
Cape Town – One of the world’s
• most
beautiful cities also has a high
murder rate: six per day
• Kinshasa – Capital of the Democratic
Republic of Congo (ex-Belgium
Congo) is at the top of the list of
the worse assignments for an
international executive.
Mexico – Local drugs cartel
• Juarez,
isn’t famous by chance. It kills by the • Beirut – The civil war is over, but
violence and attacks continue to
truckload.
– With the men from the
• Moscow
former KGB in power, record personal
rage on.
insecurity on the streets.
PIB
79
Globe-Trotter - Express Tourism
by Gustavo Rabello
Welcome to Shanghai, the “Pearl of the
East”. China´s financial cosmopolitan capital
city is the poster child of the country´s
helter-skelter growth, and a thriving city
with state-of-the-art infrastructure fit to
make any Brazilian jealous. Which is why life
in Shanghai, with its 20 million population,
is easier than you would think.
Your immersion into the new Eastern world
quickly begins upon arrival at Pudong International Airport. Visitors can go to the city by
cab or take the famous magnetic levitation
train, Maglev, which takes passengers from
the international airport to the financial center at a speed of up to 430Km/h – the train
can do a staggering 32km in 8 minutes.
Our guide will be the partner representing
the Noronha Advogados Law firm, Gustavo
Rabello – a Brazilian lawyer who has spent
the last three years in Shanghai. Here are
his tips:
If you´ve got the
whole weekend...
80
PIB
Yu Yuan:
traditional
architecture
If you have the whole day...
A VISIT TO THE Jade Buddha temple, featuring the world´s
largest jade statue, is also well worth the while. For lunch,
you must visit Xintiandi, a region full of restaurants and well
worth taking a walk around. Yearning for a barbecue? Brazilians are catered to by a typical eat-all-you-can Latina steakhouse. But hey, we´re in Shanghai to discover China, right? So
it´s best visiting the Crystal Jade restaurant, which serves
up delicious local dishes. Then travel down the Huangpu River
to visit the east side of the city. Going up to the 100th floor of
the Shanghai World Financial Center is an unforgettable
experience. As the tallest building in China, it also boasts the
world´s highest observatory on its top floor (choose a nice
sunny day to make the ´climb´). To round off a perfect day, I
suggest the Kabb bar/restaurant.
CUPERTINO/SHUTTERSTOCK
The Jade
Buddha:
the world’s
largest
ISTOCKPHOTO
If you have a few hours...
YOU MUST VISIT THE Yu Yuan Garden, one of
the few remaining locations in the city preserved
in the style of traditional Chinese architecture. It is
a garden built in 1368. While you´re there, why not
buy some Chinese handicraft at great prices and eat
at some of the authentic restaurants. The garden is
close to the Huangpu River, which cuts the city into
two parts: Puxi and Pudong (West and East of the
river). Have lunch at the famous Din Tai Fung, a Taiwanese restaurant that serves up delicious Chinese
dumplings, which come in various flavors. On the way
back to Pudong Airport, you must stop off at Pearl
Tower, an ultra-modern postcard of the city, for a
photo session. It reminds you of something out of the
Jetsons, but is a symbol of Shanghai´s progress.
The Shanghai
Museum:
ancient
Chinese art
JIANGING GU/ DREAMSTIME.COM
Shanghai
Pearl
Tower:
Shanghai’s
futuristic
look
STICK TO THE ABOVE itinerary
but also work your way through the
People´s Square and the Shanghai
Museum, to really delve into Chinese
culture. Close to the People´s Square,
the Urban Planning Museum features a scale model of the city´s planning for the next 20 years – a nice little
(excuse the pun) example of how the
Shanghai government thinks, works
and (literally) plans ahead.
In the region close to the People´s
Square, you will also find the Barbarossa Bar & Restaurant, which serves
up Asian dishes in pleasant garden
surroundings – a very attractive and
romantic evening spot. Since the People´s
Square is located on East Nanjing
Road, you can walk to West Nanjing
Road where you will find renowned Chinese and international stores. I recommend a trip to the Fabric Market to buy
silk ties and accessories.
The Pudong side (east) of the city is home
to the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum, and also offers tourists a splendid clothes, toys, shoes and
pearls market on its underground floor –
access is close to the entry of the subway
station that leads to the museum. To
round off your trip, you must visit the
traditional Chinese circuses – offering up
stunning acrobatic extravaganza. The
most famous is ERA. Another excellent
circus is located inside the RitzCarlton
hotel, on West Nanjing Road.
PIB
81
Globe-Trotter • In Transit
PAULO SALVADOR*
I
N 2006, WHEN I WAS WORKING in
São Paulo for a large French multinational
hotel chain, I was invited to participate
in a global project at the group’s head office in
Paris. Working at the heart of a global company and leading people of another nationality
(all in a foreign language) left me feeling a bit
like the circus juggler who tosses up plates in
the air while at the same time conveying tranquility to the audience.
Despite the degree of globalization of the
business world and the fact that management references appear to be standardized,
when we arrive in a new country we see that
the reality is completely different. At home,
we learn about cultural differences; it is only
abroad that we start learning about contextual differences. Things seem slower, we make
mistakes without realizing, nothing is simple,
we work a lot more, no-one understands us
and we don’t fully understand what they are
saying. Everything seems cloudy.
One example: when I worked in Brazil and
took part in meetings in Paris, I was never
asked to speak any language other than
English. Upon assuming my new job title in
France, the very same people who I used to
talk to in English in our meetings now only
speak to me in French. The influence of my
new environment and context meant that now
only the French language was allowed. After
some time, whenever I spoke in English at the
company I felt like a fish out of water.
Entering and fitting into a new context
takes time, requires an open and flexible
mind, cultural interest, creativity, optimism
82
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ESSO
IVO P
RQU
ON/A
MAY
Paulo Salvador and
family in France: nothing
is simple for expats
PAUL
O
Globalization is a fact, but countries
and cultures remain very different.
This was what the Brazilian
executive Paulo Salvador found
out in his Parisian adventure
AL
Real life is different
and energy. And the entire family has to participate in the effort.
When we arrived, my wife and I read about French history and
sociology, and we enrolled our children in a French school. In the
beginning it was tough. Very tough. I left behind my old friends
and it took time to make new ones, as if we had opted for schools
and ghettos of expatriates.
But the fact is that today, four years later, we have formed a
group of French friends who, undoubtedly, will accompany us for
the rest of our lives. And we can now also confidently say that
we have truly discovered the French savoir vivre. The project that
took me to Paris ended in 2009. I decided to hand in my resignation and interrupt my executive career to realize a long-standing
dream of studying sociology. And in France, there’s no better
place.
Here in Europe, everyone is saying that this is an historical
moment for Brazil. Four years ago, the newspapers only commented on violence and social inequality. Today, I read reports
about stability, responsibility of government leaders, the value
of the pre-salt and the explosion of Brazil’s new middle class.
Seminars on Brazil fill the auditoria of universities, and Brazilian
executives enjoy an excellent reputation: we are seen as friendly,
cool, resistant to pressure and skilful negotiators.
For those on the move, I offer two pieces of advice. First:
plan your next step. In any international experience, executives
should devote some time to foreseeing the next stage of their
careers. Secondly: be confident in your Brazilian identity, but
avoid any arrogance. Delve deep into local culture (especially of
the company where you will work). The philosopher Mario Sergio
Cortela says one of the smartest things a person can know is to
know that he doesn’t know. This phrase should feature in the
luggage of anyone setting off to work abroad.
Paulo Salvador is a journalist, lives in Paris and is on his sabbatical year,
studying Business Sociology at Sciences Po.
Pre-Export Finance
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Consultoria em Negócios
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e Acompanhamento do Fluxo
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Notas Promissórias
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Data collection for information purposes only. Financial transactions in 2009.
Glasswar
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